Title of article :
The many faces of stereotype threat: Group- and self-threat
Author/Authors :
Wout، نويسنده , , Daryl and Danso، نويسنده , , Henry and Jackson، نويسنده , , James and Spencer، نويسنده , , Steve، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Contending with negative intellectual stereotypes has been shown to depress the academic performance of targets of the stereotypes [Steele, C. M. (1997). A threat in the air: How stereotypes shape intellectual identity and performance. American Psychologist, 52, 613–629]. The present paper examines whether women’s mathematics performance is differentially affected by the concern of confirming that a negative stereotype is true of the self (self-threat), than by the concern of confirming that the stereotype is true of their gender (group-threat). In two studies we independently manipulated these different threats for women taking a mathematics test. Gender identification moderated the effect of group-threats on test performance; only women highly identified with their gender underperformed. The performance of less gender-identified women was unaffected by group-threats. In contrast, gender identification did not moderate the effect of self-threats—both high- and low-identified women underperformed. The results of these studies suggest that women’s math performance is differentially affected by the source of the threat.
Keywords :
stereotyping , Stigma , Self and identity , gender , stereotype threat
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology