Ethnic Prejudice in Young Children in Indonesia: Intervention Attempts Using Multicultural Friendship Stories

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11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ethnic prejudice, even among very young children, is a universal occurrence. Yet, little research has been conducted on this issue outside of Westernized contexts. The current study evaluated a storybook intervention in Indonesia, a country of historically high racial tensions, designed to reduce young children’s ethnic bias regarding out-groups of high-status (i.e., Chinese) and low-status (i.e., Papuan). In Study 1, 138 children, aged from 4 to 7 years, participated and included 87 children in an intervention group. The children were read two stories about cross-ethnic friendships over 2 days. Children’s attitudes were evaluated before and after the storybook reading using the Multi-response Racial Attitude measure and a social distance measure. Analyses indicated minimal to no effectiveness of the intervention. These findings were replicated in Study 2 with 20 children who received an enhanced intervention procedure by being read five different stories about cross-ethnic friendships, each book read two times over the course of 5 weeks, followed by discussions about the messages in the stories. Again, there was no reduction in racial bias. The combined lack of prejudice reduction across Study 1 and Study 2 emphasized how strong racial bias for lowest status, ethnic out-groups develops from an early age and that these prejudices are difficult to change, warranting greater attention in early childhood educational research.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)67-84
Number of pages18
JournalInternational Journal of Early Childhood
Volume50
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2018

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, Springer Science+Business Media B.V., part of Springer Nature.

Funding

Acknowledgements This research was conducted as part of the international Una Global Evaluation Group, whose members include (in addition to Aboud and Brown) Colin Tredoux, Linda R. Tropp, Ulrike Niens, Noraini M. Noor, Charlotte Cole, Buhle Zuma, and Luigi Castelli. They were all critical in the development of this intervention. Special thanks to Noraini Noor and Amanda Williams for their contributions to the data collection process in Jakarta and Bandung. Special acknowledgement to Irfan Amalee of Peace Generation Indonesia who wrote and illustrated the storybooks. They were produced by Mizan Publishers. We are grateful to Paul Connolly and the Una Global Organization (www.unaglobal. org) for providing funds to support this research, through funding from the Bernard van Leer Foundation and Atlantic Philanthropies. Most importantly, we deeply appreciate the multi-lingual research assistants from Jakarta and Bandung who were critical to the study, and the school directors, teachers, parents, and children who graciously participated.

Funders
Atlantic Philanthropies
Bernard van Leer Foundation

    Keywords

    • Early childhood
    • Ethnic bias
    • Multicultural
    • Prejudice
    • Racial bias
    • Storybook intervention

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Education
    • Developmental and Educational Psychology

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