Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands.
Department of Psychology, Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Aug 3;17(8):e0271396. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0271396. eCollection 2022.
Implicit math = male stereotypes have been found in early childhood and are linked to girls' disproportionate disengagement from math-related activities and later careers. Yet, little is known about how malleable children's automatic stereotypes are, especially in response to brief interventions. In a sample of 336 six- to eleven-year-olds, we experimentally tested whether exposure to a brief story vignette intervention with either stereotypical, neutral, or counter-stereotypical content (three conditions: math = boy vs. neutral vs. math = girl) could change implicit math-gender stereotypes. Results suggested that children's implicit math = male stereotypes were indeed responsive to brief stories that either reinforced or countered the widespread math = male stereotype. Children exposed to the counter-stereotypical stories showed significantly lower (and non-significant) stereotypes compared to children exposed to the stereotypical stories. Critically, exposure to stories that perpetuated math = male stereotypes significantly increased math-gender stereotypes over and above baseline, underscoring that implicit gender biases that are readily formed during this period in childhood and even brief exposure to stereotypical content can strengthen them. As a secondary question, we also examined whether changes in stereotypes might also lead to changes in implicit math self-concept. Evidence for effects on implicit self-concept were not statistically significant.
内隐数学刻板印象早在儿童早期就已被发现,与女孩不成比例地脱离与数学相关的活动和日后的职业有关。然而,对于儿童的自动刻板印象的可塑性,尤其是对短暂干预的反应,我们知之甚少。在一项由 336 名 6 至 11 岁儿童组成的样本中,我们通过实验测试了暴露于简短故事片段干预(有刻板印象、中性或反刻板印象内容三种条件:数学=男孩对中性对数学=女孩)是否可以改变内隐数学性别刻板印象。结果表明,儿童的内隐数学=男性刻板印象确实对强化或反驳普遍的数学=男性刻板印象的简短故事有反应。与接触刻板印象故事的孩子相比,接触反刻板印象故事的孩子表现出明显较低(且不显著)的刻板印象。至关重要的是,接触强化数学=男性刻板印象的故事不仅比基线显著增加了数学性别刻板印象,而且突显了在此期间在儿童时期形成的内隐性别偏见,甚至短暂接触刻板印象内容也可以加强这些偏见。作为次要问题,我们还检查了刻板印象的变化是否也可能导致内隐数学自我概念的变化。没有统计学意义的证据表明刻板印象的变化会导致内隐自我概念的变化。