6.3 Explain how race, ethnicity, prejudice, discrimination, and stereotype threat might affect student learning and achievement in schools.
Damon, an African American student in Diane Collins's math class, pushed his math test away after a few minutes and proclaimed, "This is stupid. I don't know why we even have to do this." What is Ms. Collins most likely to think?
Damon may be exhibiting performance-avoidance goals because he doesn't want to look dumb.
Scores on standardized achievement tests in the last 30 years indicate that:
White students score better than both Black and Hispanic students, but the gap is narrowing.
Abeer is a smart third-grader in a class where she is the only student of color. Her teacher is experienced and open-minded about diversity and so goes out of her way to call on Abeer more often than she might if Abeer were White, even when her hand is not raised. The teacher is best described as:
engaging in discrimination.
If a person has rigid, irrational beliefs and negative feelings about a particular category of people, researchers describe the person as:
prejudiced.
"A socially constructed category of people who share certain physical characteristics that members of a society have considered important" is the way researchers define:
race.