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Ways in which prejudice is expressed also change


Question: How can I make notes with bullet points in this paragraph? The ways in which prejudice is expressed also change as children get older. In early childhood, prejudice is expressed by avoidance and social exclusion; in late childhood and adolescence, it is expressed in conflict and hostility (Aboud, 2005). However, by this age, some young people have learned the social costs of overt expressions of prejudice, and so they hide their true feelings. Instead of displaying explicit or public prejudice, their prejudice is implicit-that is, unconscious or automatic. The Implicit Association Test (IAT) measures the speed with which children classify a series of faces as either black or white and a series of words as cither good-"joy," "love," "peace," "pleasure"-or bad-"terrible," "horrible," "nasty," "awful" (Banaji & Greenwald, 2013). Implicit prejudice for white children is measured by comparing how fast they respond to stereotyped pairings (white faces/ good words; black faces/bad words) and nonstereotyped pairings (white faces/bad words; black faces/good words). Prejudice is inferred when response times to the stereotyped pairings are shorter than response times to nonstereotyped pairings. Need Assignment Help?

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Other Subject: Ways in which prejudice is expressed also change
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