Talking to Children About Race, Gender, and Social Issues: Review and Recommendations

IF 3.4 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Lacey J. Hilliard, M. K. Attaya, Michelle Millben
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Children notice group conflict and societal injustices. Educators and caregivers sometimes shield children from challenging social issues because they think that children cannot understand complex topics or because they think learning the information will be harmful. By avoiding such conversations, educators and caregivers are ignoring societal structures that privilege some groups over others. Children are aware of current events, social issues, and differences between people. They come to their own conclusions about the observed differences and differential treatment but without the tools to challenge biases and inequities. This brief reviews research on children’s developmental capacity to understand discrimination, with a focus on early-to-middle childhood and topics related to race, gender, and immigration status. Implications for policy and practice appear alongside recommendations, with a particular focus on the benefits to having these challenging conversations in schools.
与儿童谈论种族、性别和社会问题:回顾和建议
儿童注意到群体冲突和社会不公正。教育工作者和照顾者有时会保护儿童免受具有挑战性的社会问题的影响,因为他们认为儿童无法理解复杂的主题,或者因为他们认为学习这些信息会有害。通过避免这种对话,教育工作者和护理人员忽视了一些群体比其他群体享有特权的社会结构。孩子们了解时事、社会问题和人与人之间的差异。他们对观察到的差异和差别待遇得出了自己的结论,但没有挑战偏见和不公平的工具。本文简要回顾了关于儿童理解歧视的发展能力的研究,重点是儿童早期至中期以及与种族、性别和移民身份有关的主题。对政策和实践的影响与建议一起出现,特别关注在学校进行这些富有挑战性的对话的好处。
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
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences Social Sciences-Public Administration
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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