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Accepted Paper:
Paper short abstract:
This article expands the study of stereotyping and prejudice in the classroom to Sub-Saharan Africa, a region that has been overlooked within social psychology despite its history of inter-group conflict. In particular, we analyze stereotypes among secondary school teachers in Kenya.
Paper long abstract:
An extensive body of research in Western settings has studied the effect of teachers' ethnic stereotypes and prejudice on pupils' performance and inter-group relations at school. As such, teachers' group-based expectations of pupils' performance would significantly lower the scholarly achievement of pupils from stereotyped groups, and would contribute to the persistence of existing stereotypes. School diversity itself would, moreover, have important implications for inter-group relations. None of these studies, to our knowledge, have been replicated in Sub-Saharan Africa. More generally, the state of the art in social-psychological research on inter-group attitudes in the area is sparse. Nevertheless, the region has been the scene of many inter-group conflicts in the past decades. In Kenya, for example, ethnic tensions were exacerbated prior to and in the aftermath of the presidential elections of 2007-2008, leading to a post-electoral crisis that cost the lives of an estimated 1000 people. This article attempts to expand the study of stereotyping and prejudice at school to a Sub-Saharan setting by studying teachers' ethno-religious stereotypes, while controlling for school diversity. Analyzing results from a large-scale survey (N=925) among secondary schools teachers in Nairobi, we find that popular societal ethno-religious stereotypes are present among teachers and that teachers are prone to a positive in-group bias. In line with the theory of peace education, we hence argue that teacher training in Kenya needs to sensitize teachers on prejudice reduction in order to break the cycle of politicization of ethnicity in the country.
Teaching peace after conflict: the effect of teachers' agency and social identity on the effectiveness of peace education
Session 1