Science does not disagree with me at all.
I suggest you read the entire dissertation (you do know what a dissertation is, right?)
An excerpt:
"Children who reported having Black friends showed slightly more positive evaluations of Blacks. However, neighborhood diversity was positively correlated with childrenâs negative evaluations of Blacks.
Results revealed that parents in general were
very reluctant to discuss the topic of race with their children. Only 33% of mothers and 20% of fathers reported having significant race related discussions.
Many parents chosenot to have such discussions because they did not want to make a âbig dealâ out of it, they did not think it was important to talk about, or they did not know how to approach
the topic in conversation.
Parentsâ and childrenâs racial attitudes were uncorrelated,
indicating that children do not automatically adopt their parentsâ attitudes. However, childrenâs perceptions of their parentsâ racial attitudes were significantly correlated with their own positive and negative attitudes towards Blacks.
It appeared that parents were equally reluctant to talk about race even when specifically instructed to do so. Close to half of parents in the two discussion groups admitted that they only briefly mentioned some of the topics.
Only 10% of the parents reported having more in-depth discussions with their children. This likely affected the effectiveness of the intervention, and the children in the experimental groups did not show statistically significant improvements of their racial attitudes following the intervention.
Prior to the intervention, many children reported that they did not know if their parents liked Black people or if their parents would approve of them having Black friends.
Children who were aware of their parentsâ interracial friendships showed more positive and less negative evaluations of Blacks.
Furthermore, children in the discussion groups
expressed more awareness of their parentsâ racial attitudes following the intervention."
Conclusion:
"CONCLUSION
Prejudice continues to be a problem in our society, and in order to eliminate, or at least decrease its occurrence, it is important to intervene with children when they are young.
As children get older, their racial attitudes and behaviors are likely to become more negative and harder to change (Stephan & Vogt, 2004). Children who adopt more egalitarian views will display less racial bias, and this in turn may lead to less racial tension in our society.
As this study has documented, many parents choose not to discuss
the topic of race with their children. For some parents, television programs promoting positive interracial interactions may be useful as a way to approach the subject, because they can use the television content to initiate conversations with their children about race.
Although it appears that a number of parents are uncomfortable in discussing with their children the topic of race and discrimination, this study sheds some initial light on the role parent-child conversations may play in enlightening children about their parentsâ
racial attitudes.
It is hoped that this study can be a springboard to future investigations into the impact parents and educational television can have on improving childrenâs racial attitudes.
Dissertation here:
http://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/...d=1E4945BB9E2FD747324CD609106175AB?sequence=2
I suggest you read the entire dissertation (you do know what a dissertation is, right?)
An excerpt:
"Children who reported having Black friends showed slightly more positive evaluations of Blacks. However, neighborhood diversity was positively correlated with childrenâs negative evaluations of Blacks.
Results revealed that parents in general were
very reluctant to discuss the topic of race with their children. Only 33% of mothers and 20% of fathers reported having significant race related discussions.
Many parents chosenot to have such discussions because they did not want to make a âbig dealâ out of it, they did not think it was important to talk about, or they did not know how to approach
the topic in conversation.
Parentsâ and childrenâs racial attitudes were uncorrelated,
indicating that children do not automatically adopt their parentsâ attitudes. However, childrenâs perceptions of their parentsâ racial attitudes were significantly correlated with their own positive and negative attitudes towards Blacks.
It appeared that parents were equally reluctant to talk about race even when specifically instructed to do so. Close to half of parents in the two discussion groups admitted that they only briefly mentioned some of the topics.
Only 10% of the parents reported having more in-depth discussions with their children. This likely affected the effectiveness of the intervention, and the children in the experimental groups did not show statistically significant improvements of their racial attitudes following the intervention.
Prior to the intervention, many children reported that they did not know if their parents liked Black people or if their parents would approve of them having Black friends.
Children who were aware of their parentsâ interracial friendships showed more positive and less negative evaluations of Blacks.
Furthermore, children in the discussion groups
expressed more awareness of their parentsâ racial attitudes following the intervention."
Conclusion:
"CONCLUSION
Prejudice continues to be a problem in our society, and in order to eliminate, or at least decrease its occurrence, it is important to intervene with children when they are young.
As children get older, their racial attitudes and behaviors are likely to become more negative and harder to change (Stephan & Vogt, 2004). Children who adopt more egalitarian views will display less racial bias, and this in turn may lead to less racial tension in our society.
As this study has documented, many parents choose not to discuss
the topic of race with their children. For some parents, television programs promoting positive interracial interactions may be useful as a way to approach the subject, because they can use the television content to initiate conversations with their children about race.
Although it appears that a number of parents are uncomfortable in discussing with their children the topic of race and discrimination, this study sheds some initial light on the role parent-child conversations may play in enlightening children about their parentsâ
racial attitudes.
It is hoped that this study can be a springboard to future investigations into the impact parents and educational television can have on improving childrenâs racial attitudes.
Dissertation here:
http://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/...d=1E4945BB9E2FD747324CD609106175AB?sequence=2
Quote from phenomena:
Oh, really... Well, not to burst your mythological bubble, but science disagrees with you... Now, back off to your little cultural marxist fantasy land... LOL!!!
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See Baby Discriminate
Kids as young as 6 months judge others based on skin color. What's a parent to do?
Her first step was to give the children a Racial Attitude Measure, which asked such questions as:
How many White people are nice?
(Almost all) (A lot) (Some) (Not many) (None)
How many Black people are nice?
(Almost all) (A lot) (Some) (Not many) (None)
During the test, the descriptive adjective "nice" was replaced with more than 20 other adjectives, like "dishonest," "pretty," "curious," and "snobby."
Vittrup sent a third of the families home with multiculturally themed videos for a week, such as an episode of Sesame Street in which characters visit an African-American family's home, and an episode of Little Bill, where the entire neighborhood comes together to clean the local park.
In truth, Vittrup didn't expect that children's racial attitudes would change very much just from watching these videos. Prior research had shown that multicultural curricula in schools have far less impact than we intend them toâlargely because the implicit message "We're all friends" is too vague for young children to understand that it refers to skin color.
Yet Vittrup figured explicit conversations with parents could change that. So a second group of families got the videos, and Vittrup told these parents to use them as the jumping-off point for a discussion about interracial friendship. She provided a checklist of points to make, echoing the shows' themes. "I really believed it was going to work," Vittrup recalls.
The last third were also given the checklist of topics, but no videos. These parents were to discuss racial equality on their own, every night for five nights.
At this point, something interesting happened. Five families in the last group abruptly quit the study. Two directly told Vittrup, "We don't want to have these conversations with our child. We don't want to point out skin color."
Vittrup was taken abackâthese families volunteered knowing full well it was a study of children's racial attitudes. Yet once they were aware that the study required talking openly about race, they started dropping out.
It was no surprise that in a liberal city like Austin, every parent was a welcoming multiculturalist, embracing diversity. But according to Vittrup's entry surveys, hardly any of these white parents had ever talked to their children directly about race.
http://www.newsweek.com/2009/09/04/see-baby-discriminate.html