Shared Education as a Contact-Based Intervention to Improve Intergroup Relations Among Adolescents in Postconflict Northern Ireland

Past research has shown that intergroup contact can be a promising intervention to improve intergroup relations and that contact-based interventions might be most effective during adolescence. In postconflict Northern Ireland, widespread residential segregation and a largely separate school system l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental psychology 2022-01, Vol.58 (1), p.193-208
Hauptverfasser: Reimer, Nils Karl, Hughes, Joanne, Blaylock, Danielle, Donnelly, Caitlin, Wölfer, Ralf, Hewstone, Miles
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 193
container_title Developmental psychology
container_volume 58
creator Reimer, Nils Karl
Hughes, Joanne
Blaylock, Danielle
Donnelly, Caitlin
Wölfer, Ralf
Hewstone, Miles
description Past research has shown that intergroup contact can be a promising intervention to improve intergroup relations and that contact-based interventions might be most effective during adolescence. In postconflict Northern Ireland, widespread residential segregation and a largely separate school system limit opportunities for intergroup contact between adolescents from the Catholic and Protestant communities. We evaluated whether a large-scale intervention to facilitate intergroup contact between students attending separate schools (the 'Shared Education' program) improves a range of outcomes relevant for intergroup relations in Northern Ireland. We conducted a 5-wave longitudinal, quasi-experimental study that followed a large sample of school students (N = 5,159, Mage = 12.4, age range: 10-14 years; 2,988 girls, 2,044 boys) from 56 predominantly Catholic or Protestant schools from sixth to tenth grade. We compared the developmental trajectories of students who, in 9th (14-15 years) and 10th (15-16 years) grade, shared some classes with students from the other community, as part of the program, to students who did not. We found that participating in shared classes had a medium-size, positive effect on the amount of intergroup contact students had outside of class, and small, positive effects on students' outgroup attitudes, outgroup trust, and intergroup empathy (but not on their intergroup anxiety, future contact intentions, deprovincialization, or multicultural beliefs). Our findings show that a school-based program of shared education can provide a viable and effective intervention to facilitate intergroup contact, improve intergroup relations, and foster social integration among adolescents at a large scale in a postconflict society.
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescent girls
Adolescents
Attitude
Catholic schools
Catholics
Child
Classes
Communities
Conflict
Education
Educational programs
Empathy
Female
Foreign Countries
Grade 10
Group dynamics
Group identity
High School Students
Human
Humans
Ingroup Outgroup
Intergroup anxiety
Intergroup contact
Intergroup Dynamics
Intergroup Education
Intergroup Relations
Interpersonal Relations
Intervention
Male
Multiculturalism
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Northern Ireland
Protestants
Quasi-experimental methods
Residential segregation
Roman Catholicism
Schools
Secondary School Students
Social contact
Social Integration
Student attitudes
Student Development
Students
Teenagers
Trust
title Shared Education as a Contact-Based Intervention to Improve Intergroup Relations Among Adolescents in Postconflict Northern Ireland
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