Black children were seen less negatively than black adults, but were seen more negatively than children from other racial groups except for Native American and Hispanic/Latinx

Young black children aged 0-8 years were almost three times more likely to be rated as being lazy than white adults, with Native American and Hispanic/Latinx young children also more likely to be considered lazy than white adults. Young black children were more than twice as likely to be rated as unintelligent or violence-prone compared with white children of the same age, with young Hispanic/Latinx children also seen as more unintelligent or violence prone than white children.

Some of the strongest levels of negative stereotyping reported by white adults working with children were reported toward teenagers, with black teenagers and Native Americans close to ten times more likely to be considered lazy than white adults. Black and Hispanic/Latinx teens were between one and a half to two times more likely to be considered violence-prone and unintelligent than white adults and white teens.

Priest said, “these findings are highly concerning given the strong scientific evidence that negative racial attitudes are associated with poorer quality care and services and with disparities in health, education and social outcomes. That these negative attitudes have been found toward even young children aged 0-8 among adults who work or volunteer with them has serious potential consequences for these children’s outcomes throughout life. Countering these negative stereotypes among adults who work with children, and protecting children from minority backgrounds from the potential impact of these attitudes, is an important strategy to address racial disparities.”

This analysis was conducted by Priest, an associate professor in the Centre for Social Research and Methods at Australian National University, during her time as a visiting scientist with co-author David Williams, Florence Sprague Norman and Laura Smart Norman Professor of Public Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and uses national data collected by the University of Michigan’s National Voices project.

“This study is a wake-up call for every professional group who works with children in the U.S.—doctors, teachers, police, child care workers, and others,” Williams said. “It suggests that many professionals, with good intentions, may be treating America’s most valuable possession, our little children, badly without even being aware of it.”

Funding for this study came from the WK Kellogg Foundation, which provides funding to the National Voices Project as part of the America Healing initiative.

“Stereotyping across intersections of race and age: Racial stereotyping among White adults working with children,” Naomi Priest, Natalie Slopen, Susan Woolford, Jeny Tony Philip, Dianne Singer, Anna Daly Kauffman, Kathryn Mosely, Matthew Davis, Yusuf Ransome, David Williams, online September 12, 2018, PLOS One, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201696

For more information:

Chris Sweeney

617-432-8416

csweeney@hsph.harvard.edu

or

Aaron Walker

+61 2 6125 7979

media@anu.edu.au





