Saturday, October 10, 2009

Even Babies Discriminate

This Newsweek article, which explains that babies start recognizing skin color as young as six months is fascinating.

Highlights:

  • Vittrup [the lead researcher] also asked all the kids a very blunt question: "Do your parents like black people?" Fourteen percent said outright, "No, my parents don't like black people"; 38 percent of the kids answered, "I don't know." In this supposed race-free vacuum being created by parents, kids were left to improvise their own conclusions—many of which would be abhorrent to their parents.
  • Of all those [families] Vittrup told to talk openly about interracial friendship, only six families managed to actually do so. And, for all six, their children dramatically improved their racial attitudes in a single week. Talking about race was clearly key. Reflecting later about the study, Vittrup said, "A lot of parents came to me afterwards and admitted they just didn't know what to say to their kids, and they didn't want the wrong thing coming out of the mouth of their kids."
  • The rule still holds true: more diversity translates into more division among students. Those increased opportunities to interact are also, effectively, increased opportunities to reject each other. And that is what's happening.
  • the odds of a white high-schooler in America having a best friend of another race is only 8 percent...85 percent of black kids' best friends are also black
  • 94 percent of African-American eighth graders reported to Harris-Britt that they'd felt discriminated against in the prior three months.
How did your parents address race when you were a child? What conclusions did you come to on your own? Were your childhood best friends of your race or another? Did your teachers ever address race?

-Alexis

1 comment:

  1. Oh boy, this reminds me of a bold comment I once made in a sociology precept that babies probably have racial preferences, too. I was trying to illustrate that discrimination is a biological thing gone socially terrible, and they were NOT into the idea of this being applied to cute, cuddly babies.

    EVERYONE JUMPED ON ME haha.

    ReplyDelete