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DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO...

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DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????
Transcript
Page 1: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

WHAT IS STEREOTYPING GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A

STEREOTYPE WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE

TEND TO STEREOTYPE

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 2: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 3: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 4: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 5: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 6: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 7: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 8: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 9: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Lawyers

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 10: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Politician

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 11: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 12: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 13: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Unit 1 Stereotypes

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 14: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Section 1 What is Stereotyping

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 15: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Dictionary definition

1 stererotype 1 an exaggerated belief associated with a category

Its a function to justify our conduct in relation to that category

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 16: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Stereotyping

2 stereotyping 2 someone claims that members of another culture all share the same often inferior or offensive characteristics

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 17: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Fill in the blank ________are forgetful

________are always getting into trouble

______are horrible drivers

_______are racist

______are very smart

______are lazy

______ are pigheaded and show no emotion

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 18: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Types of stereotypes

racial eg Red Indians in cowboy films are seen as bloodthirsty savages

gender eg women are bad drivers age eg old people are said to be very

forgetful religion eg Catholics families have a lot of

children profession eg all lawyers are greedy

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 19: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Heaven and Hell

Heaven is where the police are British the cooks are French the mechanics are German the lovers are Italian and it is all organized by the Swiss

Hell is where the police are German the cooks are English the mechanics are French the lovers are Swiss and it is all organized by the Italians

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 20: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

The typical Frenchman

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 21: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Historical basis

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 22: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

The typical Englishman

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 23: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Basis in fiction

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 24: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Where do stereotypes come from 3 where

stereotypes come from

3 Parents and family The media books Friends Education (school

university) Travel Laziness Fear Envy A sense of superiority Lack of experience of

people etc

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 25: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

STEREOTYPES

Picture of an old lady Picture of a beautiful princess

We tend to discount any perceptions that donrsquot conform to our beliefs

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 26: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

STEREROTYPES

What we see is what we expect to see

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 27: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Who stereotypesWho are targets of stereotypes 1048708 Who stereotypes 1048708 Anyone can stereotype 1048708 Who is the target of stereotyping 1048708 Anyone can be the target of

stereotyping

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 28: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

STEREOTYPESExamples (1) observations amp beliefs

Heaven ishellip Hell ishellip 1048708American house Japanese house 1048708Chinese food British food 1048708British police Chinese police 1048708German car French car 1048708French art German art

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 29: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 1

To deal with so much information in this world

To categorize people objects and eventshellip To simplify how they think about others To enhance their views of themselves and

the groups to which they belong

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 30: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

StereotypesWhy Stereotype Example 2 To degrade others as a means of

accentuating our own humanity To justify certain prejudices that we

have To strengthen our self-image at the

expense of someone else

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 31: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

STEREOTYPES

Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society

To allow people to quickly process new information about an event or person

To organize peoplersquos past experiences To meaningfully assess differences

between individuals and groups To make predictions about other peoplersquos

behavior

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 32: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

Explain where stereotypes come from List two reasons why people stereotype (which we discussed yesterday)

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 33: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

STEREOTYPESNegative impede communication

Cause us to assume that a widely held belief is true (for any individual) when it actually may not be

Continued use of the stereotype reinforces the belief

Can become a ldquoself-fulfilling prophecyrdquo for the person stereotyped

Weaken our ability to think critically

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 34: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

STEREOTYPES1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization

Breeding ground for errant generalizations

Serve as a major source of disinformation about others (especially women and minorities)

May easily conceal or feed into prejudice racism sexism and other forms of bigotry

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 35: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Section 2 Perception

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 36: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Perceptions

1 perception 1 the procedure by which we try to gather and interpret information about the environment that surrounds us

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 37: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Perception Process

2 perception process

2 feedback about ourselves and others

Not always based on true picture of reality

We behave as though our perceptions are real

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 38: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true

3 attributes to perception

4 end product

3 raw data (info we experience) mental process end product

4 interpretation of our experience

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 39: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Perception Process

Click on this hyperlink to view perception pictures

httpwwwauthorstreamcomPresentationPrudenza-41006-Perception-Process-Stereotypes-OPTICAL-ILLUSION-ILLUSIONS-OVERVIEW-Defined-Attributes-Eco-proc-Entertainment-ppt-powerpoint

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 40: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 41: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 42: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 43: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 44: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 45: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 46: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 47: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 48: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 49: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 50: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 51: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 52: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

What do you seeWhat do you see

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 53: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

The Muller-Lyer Illusion

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 54: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

WHAT IS PERCEPTION ARE OUR PERCEPTIONS ALWAYS TRUE

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 55: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Self-fulfilling prophecy

5 self-fulfilling prophecy

5 a person influencing the behavior of another person by actions related to hisher expectations

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 56: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy 6 concept of self-

fulfilling prophecy 6 individual holds

expectation that even will occur

Believing that the expectation is correct individuals engage in a course of action causing the event to happen

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 57: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Perceptual Shortcuts

7 perceptual shortcuts

7 minds ability to take in new information mix wold information and make new ideas

Ex first impression just like me

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 58: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Avoiding stereotypes

8 avoiding stereotypes

8 categorizing is normal overcome perceptions based on stereotypes distinguish bt characteristics based on overgeneralizations and factual evidence

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 59: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 60: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead anindividual or group of individuals to bebiased for or against members of particulargroups prior to actual experience of thosegroups 1 prejudice 1 refer to the

irrational dislike suspicion or hatred of a particular group race religion or sexual orientation

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 61: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice Both are a stumbling block to intercultural

communication Both refer to making judgments about

individuals based on group membership Prejudice usually refers to the negative aspect

when a group inherits or generates hostile views about a distinguishable group based on generalizations

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 62: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

Have you ever dealt with a stereotype or seen someone stereotype someone else How does stereotyping affect peoples lives

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 63: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Scale and Consequence

To virtually any group (including whole nations or continents) to which generalized characteristics can be applied

Thus individual members of those groups are denied the right to be recognized or treated as individuals with individual characteristics

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 64: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Reasons for persistence

Socialization Prejudice are learned from parents or (and) media

Social benefits Expressing a prejudice may bring support from others who share that prejudice

Economic benefits (Arab oil Trade tensions with Japan)

Psychological benefits Prejudice can be used to generate a feeling of superiority

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 65: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Racism

2 Racism 2 It is any policy practice beliefs or attitude that attributes characteristics or status to individuals based on their race

It can either be conscious or unconscious intentional or unintentional

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 66: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Stereotype Prejudice Racism

Stereotyping and Prejudice have negative effects on communication

Stereotypes Prejudice and Racism can be learned from other people or institutions (that are prejudiced)

Continue to have a strong presence in the public media ranging from childrenrsquos books to collegersquos brochures and in electronic media

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 67: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

Prejudice and racism are commonly rooted in the childrsquos early life in communication with other people who are prejudiced or racist

Do you agree with this statement or do you disagree with this statement

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 68: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW WHEN IT COMES TO BEING

PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

LOOK IN YOUR NOTES

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 69: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

DISTINGUISH THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 70: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Discrimination

3 discrimination 3 is a sociological term referring to the treatment taken toward or against a person of a certain group in consideration based solely on class or category

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 71: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowermentThis perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination

4 Age discrimination

4 discrimination on the grounds of age

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 72: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities

5 disablism 5 discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 73: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions

6 Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

6 wide-ranging civil rights law that prohibits under certain circumstances discrimination based on disability

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 74: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women

7 sexism 7 the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other

httpwwwbusinesspunditcom10-most-sexist-print-ads-from-the-1950s

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 75: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW HAVE YOU EVER WITNESSED

DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE OR HEARD OF DISCRIMINATION TAKING PLACE EXPLAIN THE SITUATION IF YOU HAVE NOT WITNESSED A SITUATION DESCRIBE A SITUATION IN WHICH DISCRIMINATION IS TAKING PLACE

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH THIS DO NOW AND THEN I AM COMING AROUND TO COLLECT THEM

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 76: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes

8 weightism 8 refers to

discriminatory attitudes in regard to obese persons

This influences interpersonal actions

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 77: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

9 adultism 9 Also called adultarchy adult privilege and adultcentrismadultocentrism this is the wielding of authority over young people and the preference of adults before children and youth

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 78: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Adultism

Adults ldquomaturerdquo Knows whatrsquos going on Responsible Works hard Behaves

correctlyappropriately Sober Responsible upstanding

Youth ldquojust a kidrdquo Ignorant Irresponsible Lazyplays too much Behaves

badlyinappropriately Druggie ldquolonerrdquo ldquotroubledrdquo

ldquogangbangerrdquo

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 79: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Is she a bad role model

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 80: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

10 Pregnancy Discrimination Act

11 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

10 covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace

11 prohibits discrimination in the workplace including hiring firing workforce reduction sexual harassment

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 81: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOWCatholics families have a lot of

childrenIs this an example of

discrimination stereotype or self-fulfilling prophecy EXPLAIN WHY

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 82: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW A teacher (who has heard that a student

shehe is about to get is incredibly disruptive) begins to automatically chastise the student the moment they walk in the classroom Frustrated the student automatically begins to be disruptive This scenario is an example

A Perception C Self-fulfilling prophecy

B Foreshadowing D Stereotype

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 83: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW ldquoMy father believes that everyone from the

Middle East are terrorists and have no place in the United Statesrdquo This is an example of

a Ageism

b Anti-Semitic

c Prejudice

d Discrimination

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 84: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

WHAT HAVE YOU LEARNED FROM WORKING ON YOUR STEREOTYPE POWERPOINT PROJECT

Make sure you get your notes out to the very beginning I am checking them

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 85: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

ldquoJim Crowrdquo laws in the South required separate bathrooms buses and nursing homes for African Americans This is an example of

a perception b discrimination c prejudice d self-fulfilling prophecy

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 86: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

QUIZ ESSAY 1

WHEN IT COMES TO BEING PREJUDICE WHAT ARE SOME REASONS FOR PERSISTENCE

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 87: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

WHAT IS THE TOWNrsquoS ATTITUDE WHEN HERMAN BOONE (DENZEL WASHINGTON) IS ASKED TO BE THE NEW HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 88: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

After coach Boone replaces him as the head football coach what happens when coach Yoast tries to leave to another school What do his players vow to do

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 89: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

What does Gerry say when he sees Ronny ldquoSunshinerdquo getting out of the car during practice Is that a stereotype or discrimination Is it both Explain

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 90: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

WHAT WAS THE ENVIRONMENT LIKE AT TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL ON THE FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

WHAT FORMS OF PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION WERE BEING DISPLAYED

YOU HAVE UNTIL 132

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 91: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

WHY DOES GERRY WANT HIS FRIEND RAY OFF OF THE TEAM WHAT DOES GERRY CLAIM THAT RAY DID WHEN REV (THE STAR QUARTERBACK) GETS HURT IN THE GAME

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 92: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

HOW DOES THE TC WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM EVENTUALLY AVOID STEREOTYPING TO WORK TOGETHER AS ONE

YOU HAVE 1237 TO FINISH

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
Page 93: DO NOW WHAT IS STEREOTYPING????? GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF A STEREOTYPE? WHY DO YOU THINK PEOPLE TEND TO STEREOTYPE?????

DO NOW

IDENTIFY AND NAME 2-3 INSTANCES WHERE YOU SAW DISCRIMINATION PREJUDICE OR STEREOTYPES OCCURING IN THE MOVIE ldquoREMEMBER THE TITANSrdquo

YOU HAVE UNTIL 1238 TO FINISH

  • DO NOW
  • What Stereotype comes to your mind when you see this picture
  • Slide 3
  • Slide 4
  • Slide 5
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • Slide 8
  • Slide 9
  • Politician
  • Slide 11
  • Slide 12
  • Unit 1 Stereotypes
  • Section 1 What is Stereotyping
  • Dictionary definition
  • Stereotyping
  • Fill in the blank
  • Types of stereotypes
  • Heaven and Hell
  • The typical Frenchman
  • Historical basis
  • The typical Englishman
  • Basis in fiction
  • Where do stereotypes come from
  • STEREOTYPES
  • STEREROTYPES
  • Who stereotypes Who are targets of stereotypes
  • STEREOTYPES Examples (1) observations amp beliefs
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 1
  • Stereotypes Why Stereotype Example 2
  • STEREOTYPES Positive People rely on stereotypes everyday to help them function in society
  • Slide 32
  • STEREOTYPES Negative impede communication
  • STEREOTYPES 1048708 Negative oversimplified generalization
  • Section 2 Perception
  • Perceptions
  • Perception Process
  • Although you may perceive it to be true does not mean it is necessarily true
  • Slide 39
  • PowerPoint Presentation
  • Slide 41
  • Slide 42
  • Slide 43
  • Slide 44
  • Slide 45
  • What do you see
  • Slide 47
  • Slide 48
  • Slide 49
  • Slide 50
  • Slide 51
  • Slide 52
  • The Muller-Lyer Illusion
  • Slide 54
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Concept of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • Perceptual Shortcuts
  • Avoiding stereotypes
  • Section 3 Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudice Learned beliefs and values that lead an individual or group of individuals to be biased for or against members of particular groups prior to actual experience of those groups
  • Relation bt Stereotype and Prejudice
  • Slide 62
  • Scale and Consequence
  • Reasons for persistence
  • Racism
  • Stereotype Prejudice Racism
  • Slide 67
  • Slide 68
  • Slide 69
  • Discrimination
  • Some people consider that teenagers and youth (around 15ndash25 years old) are victims of adultism age discrimination framed as a paternalistic form of protection In seeking social justice they feel that it is necessary to remove the use of a false moral agenda in order to achieve agency and empowerment This perspective is based on the grounds that youth should be treated more respectfully by adults and not as second-class citizens Some suggest that social stratification in age groups causes outsiders to incorrectly stereotype and generalize the group for instance that all adolescents are equally immature violent or rebellious listen to rock tunes and do drugs Some have organized groups against age discrimination
  • Discrimination against people with disabilities in favor of people who are not is called ableism or disablism Disability discrimination which treats non-disabled individuals as the standard of lsquonormal livingrsquo results in public and private places and services education and social work that are built to serve standard people thereby excluding those with various disabilities
  • In the United States the Americans with Disabilities Act provides guidelines for providing wheelchair access for public institutions
  • Sexism is a term coined in the mid-20th century is the belief or attitude that one gender or sex is inferior to less competent or less valuable than the other It can also refer to hatred of or prejudice towards either sex as a whole or the application of stereotypes of masculinity in relation to men or of femininity in relation to women
  • Slide 75
  • Common weight-based stereotypes are that obese persons are lazy lack self-discipline and have poor willpower but also possess defects of intelligence and character Common weight-based stereotypes of thin people are that thin people are unattractive anorexic unhealthy dont eat diet andor exercise excessively There is no experimental or scientific evidence to indicate that these stereotypes are true although pervasive social portrayals of obesity create and reinforce biased attitudes
  • Slide 77
  • Adultism
  • Slide 79
  • Slide 80
  • Slide 81
  • Slide 82
  • Slide 83
  • Is she a bad role model
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - covers discrimination based upon pregnancy in the workplace
  • Slide 86
  • Slide 87
  • DO NOW
  • Slide 89
  • Slide 90
  • QUIZ ESSAY 1
  • Slide 92
  • Slide 93
  • Slide 94
  • Slide 95
  • Slide 96
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98

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