Weiss M F
Milton H. Erickson Institute of Northern Illinois, Chicago 60645.
Psychol Rep. 1994 Feb;74(1):51-6. doi: 10.2466/pr0.1994.74.1.51.
In 1986, Weiss reported the measurement of the attitudes of 577 children of elementary school age toward mental illness and mentally ill persons relative to other stigmatized groups on a projective measure of social distance. It was concluded that attitudes toward deviant groups were evidenced by Kindergarten and did not change appreciably with increasing age or grade. Eight years later, 35 of the previously examined 65 Kindergarten students were still enrolled in the district. Parental permission to repeat the evaluation was received for 34 of those students. The results of this longitudinal research were remarkably similar to the results in the original cross-sectional research, again leading to the conclusion that attitudes toward the mentally ill become quite stable and enduring by the time a child enters Kindergarten. Only one stigmatized group, mentally retarded persons, significantly changed in terms of social distance and interpersonal attraction toward being more acceptable.
1986年,韦斯报告了一项研究,该研究通过社会距离投射测量法,对577名小学适龄儿童对精神疾病及精神疾病患者的态度与其他受污名化群体进行了比较。研究得出结论,幼儿园儿童就已表现出对偏差群体的态度,且这种态度不会随年龄或年级的增长而显著变化。八年后,之前接受检查的65名幼儿园学生中有35名仍在该学区就读。其中34名学生获得了家长允许再次进行评估。这项纵向研究的结果与最初的横断面研究结果非常相似,再次得出结论,即儿童进入幼儿园时,对精神疾病患者的态度就已经相当稳定且持久。只有一个受污名化群体,即智力障碍者,在社会距离和人际吸引力方面有显著变化,变得更易被接受。