Negro children's performance on a discrimination task as a function of examiner race and verbal incentive

A study to determine the differential effect of Negro and white examiners on the performance of 324 rural Negro school children on an oddity discrimination task under the variables of grade level (2, 6, 10), intelligence level (high, medium, low), and experimental incentive condition (praise, blame,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of personality and social psychology 1965-12, Vol.2 (6), p.839-843
Hauptverfasser: Kennedy, Wallace A, Vega, Manuel
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container_title Journal of personality and social psychology
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creator Kennedy, Wallace A
Vega, Manuel
description A study to determine the differential effect of Negro and white examiners on the performance of 324 rural Negro school children on an oddity discrimination task under the variables of grade level (2, 6, 10), intelligence level (high, medium, low), and experimental incentive condition (praise, blame, control). Results indicated significant effects from examiner race, experimental incentive, and the interaction between the 2, as well as their combined interaction with grade level. It was the Negro Ss' reaction to blame under Negro examiners which differentiated their performance from that of white Ss under white examiners.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/h0022624
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identifier ISSN: 0022-3514
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1939-1315
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source MEDLINE; EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Achievement
African Americans
Black People
Blame
Child
Discrimination Learning
Female
Florida
Grade Level
Human
Humans
Incentives
Intelligence Tests
Interpersonal Relations
Male
Motivation
Psychology, Educational
Punishment
Schools
Self-Control
Social Conditions
United States
title Negro children's performance on a discrimination task as a function of examiner race and verbal incentive
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