scholarly journals Throw Them All in One Pot? Differences in Stereotypes About Subgroups of Pre-Service Teachers

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin O. Stuckert ◽  
Toni A. Ihme ◽  
Anna Südkamp ◽  
Jens Möller

According to the stereotype content model, stereotypes can be described by using the dimensions competence and warmth. Compared to other professions, teaching is associated with a paternalistic stereotype consisting of high warmth and low competence. In four studies, stereotypes about different subgroups of pre-service teachers were compared. The aim was to understand sub-stereotypes better that could lead to different levels of stereotype threat and adverse behavioral tendencies. In Study 1 (N = 335), we compared stereotypes about elementary school pre-service teachers, grammar school pre-service teachers, computer science students, law students, and psychology students reported by pre-service teachers and psychology students. In contrast to nonteaching students, both groups of pre-service teachers corresponded to the paternalistic stereotype. In Study 2 (N = 243), pre-service teachers reported stereotypes about pre-service teachers for elementary schools, special education schools, comprehensive schools, vocational schools, and grammar schools. Elementary school pre-service teachers were stereotyped most paternalistically, while grammar school pre-service teachers matched the paternalistic stereotype the least. The ratings of other school types mostly fell between these extremes. In Studies 3a (N = 133, open-ended questions) and 3b (N = 308, closed-ended questions), students of various study programs compared pre-service teachers majoring in German and history (representing a non-STEM major combination) to pre-service teachers with the majors mathematics and physics (representing a STEM major combination). Pre-service teachers studying German and history were rated warmer but less competent than pre-service teachers with the majors mathematics and physics, confirmed by both methods of measuring stereotypes. In Studies 1, 3a, and 3b, ingroup favoritism in the ratings by pre-service teacher participants was tested and only found for competence in Study 1. The importance of our results and their implications for stereotype threat effects and possible interventions are discussed.

Sex Roles ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 58 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 702-712 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dustin B. Thoman ◽  
Paul H. White ◽  
Niwako Yamawaki ◽  
Hirofumi Koishi

2021 ◽  
pp. 803-813
Author(s):  
Dina Volodenko ◽  
Yuri Bulygin ◽  
Liudmila Zaytseva ◽  
Karina Tovstorebrova

2007 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
pp. 223-236
Author(s):  
Leon Mestel ◽  
Bernard E. J. Pagel

Sir William Hunter (‘Bill’) McCrea (1904–99), astrophysicist and relativist, was born on 13 December 1904 in Dublin, the elder son and eldest child of Robert Hunter McCrea (1877–1956), a schoolmaster, and Margaret née Hutton (1879–1962). His parents, of Irish stock, were brought up as strict nonconformists, but by the age of 18 years, while at Cambridge, Bill had become a confirmed Anglican, a faith he retained all his life. By 1907 the family had moved to Chesterfield, Derbyshire, where Bill attended first the Central (elementary) School and then the Grammar School, from which he won an entrance scholarship in mathematics to Trinity College, Cambridge. He read for the Mathematics Tripos, becoming a Wrangler in 1926. He specialized in those branches of mathematical physics that were stimulating exciting research at Cambridge, and after graduating he began research as one of the many pupils of R. H. (later Sir Ralph) Fowler FRS (to whom he paid warm tribute on his centenary in 1989).


1977 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 501-528

Robert Spence was born at South Shields, County Durham, on 7 October 1905, the only child of Rebecca and Robert Spence. His father was a marine engineer and since most of his life was spent at sea Robert’s upbringing was left largely in the hands of his mother. From 1911 to 1917 he went to the Stanhope Road Elementary School at South Shields and later, from 1917 to 1922, he attended Westoe Secondary Grammar School at South Shields where he obtained the John Heslop Scholarship. From his schooldays only a few memories survive: ‘We had one teacher known as “Boiler Smith” who made us learn poetry by boiling over and applying the cane. Another whom I remember with affection and respect was a true scholar. He was a historian and antiquarian who knew a good deal of science as well.’ It was the latter who first encouraged him in that direction. From Westoe Grammar he went, not yet 17 years old, to Armstrong College (now King’s) in Newcastle, then part of the University of Durham, where he obtained a first class B.Sc. in chemistry (1926), and M.Sc. and Ph.D. (1930) and finally the D.Sc. At Armstrong College he shared the Friere Marreco medal and prize for practical chemistry and the Senior Pemberton Scholarship. Apart from his academic studies, he took part in rowing and sculling; he rowed as stroke of college and university crews (for which his six foot height served him well). At this time he also developed an interest in industrial practice and spent a vacation course at the British Dyestuffs Corporation at Blakely in 1925. Other college activities were as secretary of the Newcastle Students’ Appeal in 1927, as President of the College Chemical Society, and as Secretary of the Bedson Club, a student scientific society at Armstrong College.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 45
Author(s):  
Tsabita Fiki Amalia ◽  
Ika Candra Sayekti

ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) ia an integratied system of the countries in Southeast Asia that enable and facilitate the free trade system. Since 2015 the AEC has been officially started, and many foreign companies has been opened in Indonesia. However, the quality of Human Resources (HR) in Indonesia is lacking to confront AEC’s system. It can be seen from the number of unemployed people in Indonesia and Indonesian citizen education level is still low. This shows a lack of quality in education. Departing from this problem, the authors conducted research at the international elementary school, SDII Al Abidin Surakarta. This school has excellent programs that can be developed and replicated in order to improve the quality of Human Resources (HR) since elementary school. This research aims to study programs that are run in order to deal with AEC. This research was conducted with a qualitative descriptive method by collecting data through interviews, observation, and documentation. The results showed some excellent programs that are owned by SDII Al Abidin Surakarta which can be used as a weapon to face the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC). The programs are international curriculum, three varians grade programs, and extracurricular.


2010 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maja Häusler ◽  
Zrinjka Glovacki-Bernardi

The first part of the article deals with the presentation of grammar from the linguistic point of view. It gives the results of the analysis of the presentation of grammar in textbooks for German as a foreign language written by Croatian authors (in textbooks for elementary school, grammar school; for German as the first and the second foreign language). The analysis is carried out under the following criteria: explicit or implicit presentation of grammar, theoretical grammatical foundations, usage of metalinguistic terms, the language used for explanations. The second part of the article presents the analysis of grammar teaching in selected textbooks under didactical and methodical aspects (usage in texts, types of exercises and assignments). The results of the analysis are evaluated in terms of the supposed appropriateness and contemporary views regarding the grammar teaching in teaching foreign languages. What we are also interested in is the question whether and to what extent the requirements of the common international competencies description for the exam certificate have modified or changed the significance of grammar teaching in Croatian textbooks for German as a foreign language.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-42
Author(s):  
Tri Linggo Wati

This research is a descriptive study that aims to analyze the effective application of metacognitive through instructional media, the meticulous subjects used in this study are 3 students who have high, medium, low ability. What was done in the Elementary School Education Study Program of the University of Muhammadiyah Sidoarjo. The theory used is Slavin's metacognitive theory and the theory of the effectiveness of learning using Dunn's theory. Test the validity of the data using triangulation techniques, namely observation, documentation, and interviews. The results of the analysis obtained from this study were, subject A did metacognitive thinking and the existing media proved to be effective in helping metacognitive way of thinking, whereas in subject B the metacognitive way of thinking had been done only in the process of monitoring and evaluation was still lacking, the use of media on the object image said the subject helps in the process of his work. While the subject C metacognitive thought process has been carried out, only the evaluation process is still lacking, while the existing media helps in the process of metacognitive thinking. So it can be concluded that the media is very effective in helping the application of metacognitive thinking in producing two-dimensional works of art in students of elementary school teacher study programs at the University of Muhammadiyah Sidoarjo.


2018 ◽  
pp. 185-213
Author(s):  
Szymon Borsich ◽  
Maria Deptuła

Scientificmagazines have published hundreds of research papers on stereotype threat. They indicated that despite their intellectual potential some individuals may experience lower performance in school tasks because of the fear of confirminga stereotype about the low abilities of their social group. Most of the research was of an experimental nature, with the use of a single manipulation within the experiment group and comparing its results to those of the control group. Additionally, despite two decades of research, discrepancies in how the term is definedor in the manipulation and measurement methods persist. The article outlines the development of a tool for measuring the intensity of a sense of low abilities stereotype threat among elementary school pupils (grades IV-VI) and the results of a pilot study. The scale was developed based on the theoretical assumptions of Shapiro’s and Neuberg’s multi-threat concept, which appears to put in order the aforementioned discrepancies in understanding the phenomenon’s essence and the ways it is measured.


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