"You did incredibly well!": teachers' inflated praise can make children from low-SES backgrounds seem less smart (but more hardworking).

IF 3.6 1区 心理学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Emiel Schoneveld, Eddie Brummelman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Can teachers' inflated praise make children from low socioeconomic status (SES) backgrounds seem less smart? We conducted two preregistered experiments to address this question. We used hypothetical scenarios to ensure experimental control. An experiment with primary school teachers (N = 106, ages 21-63) showed that when a child from a low-SES (vs. high-SES) background succeeded in school, teachers attributed this success more to hard work and delivered more inflated praise (e.g., "You did incredibly well!") but less modest praise (e.g., "You did well!"). An experiment with primary school children (N = 63, ages 10-13) showed that when children learned that another child received inflated praise (while an equally performing classmate received modest praise or no praise), they perceived this child as less smart but more hardworking. These studies provide converging evidence that teachers' inflated praise, although well-intentioned, can make children from low-SES backgrounds seem less smart, thereby reinforcing negative stereotypes about these children's academic abilities.

Abstract Image

“你做得非常好!”老师夸大的表扬会让来自低社会经济地位背景的孩子看起来不那么聪明(但更努力)。
老师夸大的表扬是否会让来自低社会经济地位(SES)背景的孩子显得不那么聪明?我们进行了两个预先注册的实验来解决这个问题。我们使用假设的场景来确保实验控制。一项针对小学教师的实验(N = 106,年龄21-63岁)表明,当一个来自低社会经济地位背景(与高社会经济地位背景)的孩子在学校取得成功时,老师们更多地将这种成功归因于努力工作,并给予更多夸大的表扬(例如,“你做得非常好!”),而不是谦虚的表扬(例如,“你做得很好!”)。一项针对小学生(N = 63, 10-13岁)的实验表明,当孩子们得知另一个孩子得到夸大的表扬(而表现同样好的同学得到适度的表扬或没有表扬)时,他们会认为这个孩子不那么聪明,但更努力。这些研究提供了一致的证据,表明教师夸大的表扬虽然是出于善意,但会让来自低社会经济地位背景的孩子看起来不那么聪明,从而强化了对这些孩子学业能力的负面刻板印象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
7.10%
发文量
29
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