利用数字人类图书馆教授边缘化群体知识:经验教训

Chitat Chan
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摘要

本文介绍了从一个受数字故事和人类图书馆启发的项目中汲取的经验教训,该项目旨在减少对边缘化群体的偏见。通过比较同一时期不同环境中类似参与者的成果,该研究探讨了哪些类型的活动可能会对参与者的观点态度产生关键影响。研究采用案例研究法,数据来自数字人类图书馆项目,并从三种不同的参与环境中选取了参与者:A 组参与者参与在线阅读故事摘要,就人类书籍进行面对面的简短交流,并参与编辑活动;B 组参与者参与人类书籍提供的面对面的扩展分享,随后进行问答互动;C 组参与者参与在线阅读故事,但不进行互动。研究采用了便利抽样法,包括 250 名注册参与者,他们填写了测试前和测试后的问卷。研究发现,仅仅在线阅读故事(C 组)并不能显著减少偏见,而单独的面对面接触(B 组)也不能最有效地改变人们的态度。将短期面对面会谈和讲故事活动结合在一起的 A 组参与者,其观点态度的改变最为显著。这些研究结果表明,叙事活动中的对话认知过程,而不是接触方式,可能是增强观点采纳态度的关键。本文呼吁进一步研究数字人类图书馆混合体的可扩展性和更严格的实验研究设计。它强调了这些干预措施在促进更具包容性的社会、减少社会偏见和支持公平方面的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Teaching about Marginalized Groups Using a Digital Human Library: Lessons Learned
This paper presents lessons learned from a project inspired by digital storytelling and the human library to reduce prejudices against marginalized groups. By comparing the outcomes of similar participants in different settings over the same period, the study explored which types of activities might be pivotal when influencing the perspective-taking attitudes of participants. The study used a case study approach, with data from the digital human library project, and selected participants from three different engagement contexts: participants in group A were involved in reading story abstracts online, having short face-to-face meetings regarding human books, and engaging in editorial activities; participants in group B were involved in extended face-to-face sharing provided by human books, followed by question-and-answer interaction; and participants in group C were involved in the reading of stories online without interaction. Convenience sampling was used and included 250 registered participants who completed pre-test and post-test questionnaires. The study found that merely reading stories online (group C) did not significantly reduce prejudice, and face-to-face contact on its own (group B) was also not the most effective in changing attitudes. Group A participants who combined short face-to-face meetings and story-retelling activities showed the most significant changes in perspective-taking attitudes. These findings imply that dialogic cognitive processes in narrative activities, rather than the mode of contact, may be pivotal in enhancing perspective-taking attitudes. This paper calls for further research into the scalability of digital human library hybrids and more rigorous experimental research designs. It underscores the potential of these interventions to foster more inclusive societies, mitigate social biases, and support equity.
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