'Just because you haven’t heard your child say anything prejudiced does not mean that those attitudes are not forming,' Perry argues.
A Northwestern University psychology professor is pushing for parents to talk to their children about systemic racism as early as preschool, criticizing the “colorblind” approach to teaching kids that race does not matter.
Professor Sylvia Perry told Northwestern Now that parents need to be having conversations about race with their children as soon as “your child can have a conversation with you.”
“Just because you haven’t heard your child say anything prejudiced does not mean that those attitudes are not forming," Perry alleges.
Instead of taking a “passive approach,” on race Perry says, parents need to be “talking to their children about the history of and existence of racism within this country, the social construction of race, and the systemic biases that contribute to racial inequality.”
Through her research, Perry advocates for parents no longer teaching their kids about race by using a “colorblind approach- in which they emphasize a belief that race does not matter” but instead taking a “color conscious approach- in which they acknowledge race-related issues.”
“White parents have the potential to be agents of change that socialize color-conscious beliefs in their children, but many are reinforcing the current system of color-blind indifference to...
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3 comments:
Let them watch episodes of "Cops" and let them make up their own mind.
I don't think that talk with my kids will go the way she's anticipating.
I'll give my kids a talk that is much more reminiscent of "The Talk" that black parents give their kids about the police. Except rather than warning about just the police,I'll be warning my kids about how statistically dangerous certain minorities are, and why they should stay out of major cities with certain large antagonistic minority populations.
This is a prime example of why it was a poor idea to close down the institutions that isolated and treated the mentally ill.
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