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Authors: Unknown
282
WHO TEACHES A CHILD
TOHATE AND FEAR
A MEMBER OF
ANOTHER RACE?
KENNETH CLARK (1914–2005)
IN CONTEXT
D
uring the late 1930s,
Kenneth Clark and his
wife, Mamie Phipps Clark,
APPROACH
studied the psychological effects of
Race attitudes
segregation on African-American
BEFORE
schoolchildren, particularly on their
1929
German-born writer and
self-image. They designed a “doll
social worker Bruno Lasker
test” that would indicate children’s
publishes
Race Attitudes in
awareness of racial differences and
Children
, setting up methods
their underlying attitudes about
for the psychological study of
race. Working with children
children’s views on race.
between the ages of three and
seven, they used four dolls, each
Early 1930s
Canadian
identical in appearance except for
psychologist Otto Klineberg
Clark’s doll experiments
of the late
the color of their skin, which ranged
1930s and early 1940s showed that black
works with lawyers fighting
from shades of white to dark brown.
children in segregated schools often
for equal salaries for black
The children showed an undeniable
preferred white dolls, a sign that they
public-school teachers.
awareness of race by correctly
had absorbed prevailing prejudices.
identifying the dolls on the basis of
AFTER
their skin color, as well as
that this reflected the children’s
1954
The US Supreme Court
identifying themselves in racial
tendency to absorb racial prejudices
rules that racial segregation in
terms by choosing the doll that
that exist in society and then to
schools is unconstitutional,
looked most like them.
turn this hatred inward, the Clarks
in the
Brown v. Board of
In order to explore the children’s
asked a very important question:
Education of Topeka
hearings.
attitudes about race, the Clarks
“Who teaches a child to hate and
asked each of them to point out the
fear a member of another race?”
1978
Elliot Aronson devises
doll they liked best or most wanted
the “jigsaw method” of
to play with; the doll that had a nice
Passing on prejudice
teaching—where mixed-race
color; and the doll that looked bad.
The Clarks sought to understand
groups of students work
Distressingly, black children
the influences shaping prejudice
interdependently—to help
showed a clear preference for the
in America, and decided that as
reduce racial prejudice in
white dolls and a rejection of the
children learn to evaluate racial
integrated classrooms.
black dolls, which can be interpreted
differences, according to the
as indirect self-rejection. Convinced
standards of society, they are
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY 283
See also:
Elliot Aronson 244–45 ■ Muzafer Sherif 337
In 1930s America, white
By the age of three,
and even black children
children are
racially
showed a preference for
aware
and already
whiteness and a
rejection
forming
prejudices
.
of blackness
.
Kenneth Clark
Kenneth Clark was born in
the Panama Canal Zone, but
Segregation and
moved to Harlem, New York,
social influences
from
Who teaches
when he was five. After his
parents, teachers, playmates,
a child to hate
mother refused to accept a
and the media lead to
and fear a member
ruling that her son would be
children internalizing
of another race?
limited to trade or vocational
racist attitudes.
schooling, Clark was enrolled
in high school. He went on
to earn a master’s degree in
psychology from Howard
required to identify with a specific
The Clarks concluded that these
University, Washington DC,
group, and each racial group has an
attitudes are determined by a mix
where he met his wife. The
implied status within a hierarchy.
of influences, including parents,
pair carried out research
That young black children preferred
teachers, friends, television, films,
together, becoming the first
the white doll showed they were
and comics. Although it is very rare
African-American man and
aware American society preferred
for parents to deliberately teach their
woman to receive a PhD in
psychology from Columbia
white people, and had internalized
children to hate other racial groups,
University in New York City.
this. Children as young as three
many subtly and unconsciously
They also founded child
had expressed similar attitudes to
pass on dominant social attitudes.
development and youth
those of adults in their community.
Some white parents, for example,
opportunity centers in Harlem.
may discourage their children
Clark was also the first
from playing with their black peers,
African-American to hold a
implicitly teaching them to fear
permanent professorship at
and avoid black children.
the City University of New
Clark’s 1950 summary of his
York, and to serve as the
research insisted that segregation
president of the American
Segregation is a way
was damaging the personalities of
Psychological Association.
in which society tells
white and black children alike. His
a group of human beings
expert testimony in court cases
Key works
that they are inferior.
tied into the 1954
Brown v. Board
Kenneth Clark
1947
Racial Identification and
of Education of Topeka
case, which
Preference in Negro Children
determined that racial segregation
1955
Prejudice and Your Child
was unconstitutional in public
1965
Dark Ghetto
schools, contributed directly to
1974
Pathos of Power
desegregated schooling and to the
Civil Rights Movement in America. ■
284
GIRLS GET
BETTER GRADES
THAN BOYS
ELEANOR E. MACCOBY (1917– )
IN CONTEXT
But because girls tend to put in
APPROACH
a greater effort at school, and
Feminist psychology
have greater interest and
There is no
better work habits…
significant difference
BEFORE
in the overall
Early 20th century
First
intellectual aptitude
research into sex differences
of boys and girls.
by female psychologists.
…girls get better grades
1970s
Studies of the sexes
than boys.
tend to emphasize differences
between men and women.
AFTER
between the sexes are in fact
1980s
Studies suggest
myths, and that many gender
structural differences between
T
he emergence of feminist
psychologists during the
1970s revived an interest in
stereotypes are untrue. Although
the male and female brain.
the study of sex differences, which
some findings had shown boys to be
1993
Anne Fausto-Sterling
had waned during the rise of
more aggressive and more adept at
claims biological graduations
behaviorism. Feminist concerns
mathematics and spatial reasoning
exist between “male” and
became increasingly important to
than girls, and girls to have superior
“female,” such that we can
US psychologist Eleanor Maccoby.
verbal abilities, subsequent studies
identify five different sexes
Frustrated by the tendency of
revealed that these differences
along the spectrum.
psychological literature to report on
are either negligible or are more
research findings that emphasized
complex than they initially appear.
2003
Simon Baron-Cohen
the differences between men and
One difference that was
argues that the female brain is
women rather than the similarities,
consistent and undeniable was
predominantly hard-wired for
Maccoby, with student Carol
that “girls get better grades than
empathy, and the male brain
Jacklin, reviewed more than 1,600
boys” in school. Maccoby found
for understanding systems.
studies of gender differences. They
this particularly interesting,
published their findings in
The
especially considering that girls
Psychology of Sex Differences
(1974)
did not obtain higher aptitude test
with the aim of showing that what
scores when all of the subject
most consider essential differences
matter areas were reviewed.
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY 285
See also:
Janet Taylor Spence 236 ■ Simon Baron-Cohen 298–99
Girls show greater responsiveness
to teacher’s expectations and are more
willing to work, according to Maccoby’s
research, which makes them more
likely to do better at school than boys.
Intellectual development
Furthermore, previous research into
in girls is fostered
achievement motivation seemed to
by their being
suggest that boys should outperform
assertive and active.
their female peers. Males were
Eleanor E. Maccoby
arguably more oriented toward
achievement for its own sake
than girls, showing greater task
involvement, and more exploratory
behavior; females were primarily
interested in achievement relating
to interpersonal relationships—