Black and Hispanic Immigrants' Resilience against Negative-ability Racial Stereotypes at Selective Colleges and Universities in the United States

Stereotype threat is a widely supported theory for understanding the racial achievement gap in college grade performance. However, today's minority college students are increasingly of immigrant origins, and it is unclear whether two dispositional mechanisms that may increase susceptibility to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sociology of education 2012-10, Vol.85 (4), p.303-325
Hauptverfasser: Owens, Jayanti, Lynch, Scott M.
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description Stereotype threat is a widely supported theory for understanding the racial achievement gap in college grade performance. However, today's minority college students are increasingly of immigrant origins, and it is unclear whether two dispositional mechanisms that may increase susceptibility to stereotype threat are applicable to immigrants. We use survey data to examine whether and how negative-ability stereotypes affect the grades of 1,865 first-, second-, and third-generation or higher (domestic) minority students at 28 selective American colleges. Structural equation model results indicate that first-generation immigrants are highly resistant to both dispositional identity threat mechanisms we consider. Second-generation immigrants experience only certain dispositional elements of identity threat. Drawing on research in social psychology, we suggest immigrants tend to resist stereotype threat in part due to the primacy of their immigrant identities and their connectedness to the opportunity structure of mainstream society.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Journals Online; Alma/SFX Local Collection; JSTOR
subjects Academic Achievement
Acculturation
Achievement Gap
College Students
Colleges
Educational sociology
Ethnic Identity
Ethnicity
Externalization
First Generation College Students
Generational Differences
Grade Point Average
Grades (Scholastic)
Hispanic Americans
Hispanics
Human ecology and demography
Identification (Psychology)
Immigrants
Internalization
Minority & ethnic groups
Minority Group Students
Minority Groups
Minority students
Racial Differences
Racial Identification
Resilience
Resilience (Psychology)
Resistance (Psychology)
Secondary Schools
Social Bias
Social Environment
Social Psychology
Sociology
Sociology of education. Educational systems. Lifelong education
Sociology of migrations
Stereotypes
Structural Equation Models
Studies
Surveys
Threat
title Black and Hispanic Immigrants' Resilience against Negative-ability Racial Stereotypes at Selective Colleges and Universities in the United States
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