Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
Department of Psychology, University of Denver.
Dev Psychol. 2024 Dec;60(12):2242-2257. doi: 10.1037/dev0001833. Epub 2024 Sep 9.
Ethnic-racial discrimination is a pernicious experience that affects discriminated adolescents' healthy human development, but the spillover consequences of discrimination on the nondiscriminated adolescent population are less clear. Adolescents who vicariously witness their classmates experience ethnic-racial discrimination from educators may question their educators' authority and classroom rules, and educators who perpetuate discrimination may engage in other practices that disadvantage the entire classroom. Thus, we posed three research questions: Did classmates' ethnic-racial discrimination from teachers predict adolescents' classroom adjustment outcomes (e.g., class grades, test scores, and engagement), did classroom climate mediate the link between classmates' ethnic-racial discrimination and adolescents' classroom adjustment outcomes, and did the results differ between early versus middle adolescents? To answer these research questions, the present study leveraged longitudinal data among 1,539 adolescents ( = 13.81, = 1.49; 60% Black, 30% White, 9% other, 1% Asian; 49% female, 51% male) nested in 104 math classrooms, as math is a subject domain with pervasive ethnic-racial stereotypes about students' abilities and opportunities to succeed in class. Results illustrated that direct and vicarious ethnic-racial discrimination from math educators in the fall semester predicted worse math course grades, state-administered standardized test scores, and classroom engagement across the fall and spring semesters. Math classroom climate perceptions mediated the longitudinal relations between ethnic-racial discrimination and their math adjustment outcomes, and the role of ethnic-racial discrimination varied across different developmental stages of adolescence. Implications for the measurement of ethnic-racial discrimination in the classroom context and the social contagion linked to ethnic-racial disadvantage are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
种族歧视是一种有害的经历,会影响被歧视青少年的健康发展,但歧视对未被歧视的青少年群体的溢出后果尚不清楚。那些间接地目睹同学受到教育者种族歧视的青少年可能会质疑教育者的权威和课堂规则,而延续歧视的教育者可能会采取其他不利于整个课堂的做法。因此,我们提出了三个研究问题:同学受到教师的种族歧视是否预测了青少年的课堂适应结果(例如,班级成绩、考试成绩和参与度),课堂氛围是否在同学受到的种族歧视与青少年的课堂适应结果之间起中介作用,以及结果在早期青少年和中期青少年之间是否存在差异?为了回答这些研究问题,本研究利用了 1539 名青少年( = 13.81, = 1.49;60%黑人,30%白人,9%其他,1%亚洲;49%女性,51%男性)的纵向数据,这些数据嵌套在 104 个数学课堂中,因为数学是一个学科领域,普遍存在关于学生在课堂上的能力和成功机会的种族刻板印象。结果表明,秋季学期来自数学教育者的直接和间接的种族歧视预测了秋季和春季学期更差的数学课程成绩、州立标准化考试成绩和课堂参与度。数学课堂氛围感知在种族歧视与他们的数学适应结果之间的纵向关系中起中介作用,种族歧视的作用在青春期的不同发展阶段有所不同。讨论了在课堂环境中测量种族歧视以及与种族劣势相关的社会传染的意义。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。