Given the inherent difficulties in large - scale quantitative research on this topic, this internal experience may provide stronger evidence of
discrimination than the research literature.
Not exact matches
«This study of one social attitude in one domain — gender stereotypes in chess — does nothing to disprove the reality of
discrimination generally, but it does suggest that this one mechanism, stereotype threat, may be more limited in its applicability
than one might conclude from reading the experimental literature alone,» Stafford concludes in his
research article.
And Dommond isn't alone: a faculty survey carried out by the Higher Education
Research Institute found that 42 per cent of minority women in scientific disciplines reported subtle
discrimination — far more
than their white or male counterparts did.
In line with previous
research, the current study found that socioeconomic status interacted with reported
discrimination in different ways for whites
than it did for blacks.