Stigma Threat and the Fat Professor: Reducing Student Prejudice in the Classroom

SMC Author

Elena Escalera

SMC Affiliated Work

1

Status

Faculty

School

School of Science

Department

Psychology

Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

2009

Publication / Conference / Sponsorship

The Fat Studies Reader

Editor

Esther Rothblum & Solovay Solovay

Publisher/Venue

New York, NY, US: New York University Press

Description/Abstract

Weight discrimination in the workplace has long been documented in many disciplines (Kristen, 2002; Roehling, 1999). This study looks at how fat discrimination plays out in a very specialized venue: the college classroom. I decided to approach stigma threat in the classroom as anxiety. To reduce the students' anxiety from stigma threat, I used a classroom technique of assigning anonymous five-minute reaction papers at the end of each topic. This not only provides a qualitative measure of threat and challenge but also provides a way for students to express their anxiety, thus reducing physiological and psychological reactivity. Wilson (2004) notes that reflective writing can be an effective way to deal with anxiety. In addition, the reaction papers allow the students to shift their focus from me to their own attitude change processes. I hoped to find a reduction in the anti-fat bias of the students over the course of the semester. To measure this effect, I used the IAT (Implicit Association Test) (Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998). Responses from the reaction papers fell into four categories suggested by the Stigma Threat Hypothesis: neutral responses, challenge responses, threat expressive responses, and threat defensive responses. It is concluded that although the classroom is not a laboratory that can be controlled and manipulated without confounding variables, it is a very real crucible of social interaction that affects the lives of both students and professors. Not only does stigma threat endanger the professional safety and freedom of professors who belong to a stigmatized category, but it may actually interfere with the learning process itself. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Keywords

stigma threat, fat professor, student prejudice, classroom

ISBN

0-8147-7631-0 (Paperback); 0-8147-7630-2 (Hardcover); 978-0-8147-7631-5 (Paperback); 978-0-8147-7630-8 (Hardcover)

First Page

205

Last Page

212

Disciplines

Psychology

Comments

Description based on: http://psycnet.apa.org/record/2009-20976-023

Original Citation

Escalera, E. A. (2009). Stigma threat and the fat professor: Reducing student prejudice in the classroom. In E. Rothblum & S. Solovay (Eds) The Fat Studies Reader (pp. 205-212). New York, NY: New York University Press.

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