Bauer Christina A, Poddar Aashna, Brummelman Eddie, Cimpian Andrei
University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
New York University, New York, NY USA.
Educ Psychol Rev. 2025;37(3):64. doi: 10.1007/s10648-025-10034-2. Epub 2025 Jun 25.
As societies worldwide grapple with substantial educational inequities, understanding their underlying causes remains a priority. Here, we introduce the Brilliance-Belonging Model, a novel theoretical framework that illuminates how cultural beliefs about exceptional intellectual ability create inequities through their impact on students' sense of belonging. The model identifies two types of widespread cultural beliefs about ability: field-specific ability beliefs (FABs) and brilliance stereotypes. FABs are cultural beliefs about the extent to which success in an educational context requires exceptional intellectual ability or "brilliance" (e.g., math more so than language). In contrast, brilliance stereotypes are cultural beliefs that associate exceptional intellectual ability with some groups more than others (e.g., individuals from high vs. low socioeconomic status backgrounds). According to the Brilliance-Belonging Model, students from groups targeted by negative brilliance stereotypes are perceived-by themselves and others-as not belonging in contexts where brilliance-oriented FABs are common. These perceptions compromise students' psychological safety and lead to disempowering treatment by others, resulting in persistent gaps in achievement and representation. Such effects are amplified by the competitive climates to which brilliance-oriented FABs give rise, where pressure to demonstrate intellectual superiority creates particular challenges for students from intellectually stigmatized groups, who often value cooperation over competition. By revealing how cultural beliefs about intellectual ability shape educational outcomes through their effects on belonging, the Brilliance-Belonging Model provides a roadmap for interventions aimed at fostering a sustained sense of belonging among diverse students.
由于世界各地的社会都在应对严重的教育不平等问题,了解其根本原因仍然是一项首要任务。在此,我们引入了卓越—归属感模型,这是一个新颖的理论框架,阐明了关于超常智力能力的文化信念如何通过对学生归属感的影响而造成不平等。该模型识别出两种关于能力的广泛存在的文化信念:特定领域能力信念(FABs)和卓越刻板印象。特定领域能力信念是关于在教育环境中取得成功需要多大程度的超常智力能力或“卓越”的文化信念(例如,数学比语言更需要)。相比之下,卓越刻板印象是将超常智力能力与某些群体而非其他群体联系起来的文化信念(例如,来自高社会经济地位背景与低社会经济地位背景的个体)。根据卓越—归属感模型,受到负面卓越刻板印象影响的群体中的学生,无论他们自己还是其他人都认为,在以卓越为导向的特定领域能力信念普遍存在的环境中,他们不属于其中。这些认知损害了学生的心理安全感,并导致他人给予他们不利的对待,从而造成成绩和代表性方面的持续差距。卓越导向的特定领域能力信念所产生的竞争氛围会放大这些影响,在这种氛围中,展示智力优势的压力给那些在智力上受到污名化的群体中的学生带来了特殊挑战,这些学生通常更看重合作而非竞争。卓越—归属感模型揭示了关于智力能力的文化信念如何通过对归属感的影响塑造教育成果,为旨在培养不同学生持续归属感的干预措施提供了路线图。