Transcript for:
Understanding Stereotypes and Their Impact

  • Okay, so what do you think about people who wear glasses? I think people who wear glasses look incredibly intelligent. In fact, I think just wearing a pair of glasses can add ten points to your IQ. What about people who live in cities? I thought people who live in cities to be abrasive, to be rude, to be terribly impolite. What am I doing by making these comments? Well, what I'm doing is I am stereotyping. And what stereotyping means is that I'm attributing a certain sorts, a certain cognition, to a group of individuals. I am over generalizing. And stereotyping doesn't just involve a pair of glasses, not what people wear or where they live, but it can also involve race, gender, culture, religion, even shoe size, so it can be pretty all-encompassing. Doesn't stereotyping have some disadvantages? Yeah and it should be somewhat obvious. A major disadvantage is that it's pretty inaccurate. On the other hand, does stereotyping have an advantage? The answer is yes. Stereotyping actually allows us to rapidly assess large amounts of social information. So in that regard, it's actually a useful tool, even though it does have its drawbacks. What I want to do now is to talk to you about a different concept and this is, again, perhaps a negative characteristic of stereotyping. And this is the concept of stereotype threat. Let's take two groups of students. One, the red students and two, the blue students. And these students are two equally capable group of students. And now let's make them sit in exam. How do they score? How do they test? When this situation, their scores are equal. They're the same, both red and blue get the same score. Now let's do something else. Let's make them sit their exam but this time, let's expose the students to some negative stereotypes about the blue students not being good at exams, not being academic. Well, what happens now? Well, the red students score the same, but this time we noticed the blue students take a hit in their performance. Their performance drops. But this is what we see as being the stereotype threat. This is when the exposure to a negative stereotype surrounding a task can actually cause a decrease in the performance of an individual when attempting a task. So here the stereotype actually threatens performance. Now since I've been talking about city folk, city dwellers being so rude, let's put that down here. So when we put that down here, what are we really-- What are we really thinking about? So this is a thought process or a cognition. And what we've said before is when we think about cognitions, we're actually stereotyping. So if I think city dwellers are rude, then I may say that, "Hmm, you know what. I don't like them. "And you know what, if I don't like a group of people, "I'm probably not going to spend a lot of time with them. "I'm gonna probably avoid them." Well, let's have a look at these two other statements. "I don't like them." I'm attaching an affect, which is an emotion that can be positive or negative to the city dwellers. So now, there is an affective component to this. And when we have an affective component, we move from stereotyping to prejudice. And then moving from the affective component, we start to avoid them. What happens there? When we avoid them, we are actually demonstrating a behavioral component. And when we demonstrate a behavioral component, we're actually moving from prejudice to discrimination. So as we can see here, the difference between stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination is one of cognition, affect, and behavior. Well, let's go back to these city dwellers. If I avoid them, what do you think is gonna-- What do you think is gonna happen there? Well, you know what, let's take their viewpoint. If I avoid them, maybe they're going to start thinking that I am rude, So notice that may become their cognition now. And then if they think I am rude, they might not like me. And if they don't like me, they may try to avoid me. And if they avoid me, then I may start to think that they're rude. This actually feeds back here. This positively feeds back on itself. And suddenly we have this circle that can continuously feed back on itself. And notice that they have done, the same things that I did to them. A cognition, in that they think I am rude. An affective component, in that they may start to not like me. And a behavioral component, in which they start to avoid me. Well, what are we actually seeing here? Well, what we're seeing is a development of a self-fulfilling prophecy. And that's to say that our initial thought or cognition, that city dwellers are rude becomes more true and more affirmed over time, either directly or indirectly because of our own actions. To us, our initial stereotype that city dwellers are rude, becomes more true as we perceive them to be ruder and ruder over time in response to our own behavior. This is the positive feed back, that we see in a self-fulfilling prophecy.