Transcript Document

Street Law:
I Lesson Plan
Implicit Bias
Created by: Megan Crenshaw
May 14, 2014
Opinion Poll
1. An attractive person will always be hired
before a less attractive, but equally qualified
person.
Reality
-Studies show that attractive people are likely to
earn 3 to 4 % more than people with belowaverage looks.
-That adds up to almost $230,000 over a
lifetime.
Opinion Poll
2. Referees only base their calls on the rules of
the game.
Reality
-Studies show that more personal fouls are
called against players when their game is
officiated by an opposite-race refereeing crew
than when officiated by a same-race
refereeing crew.
Opinion Poll
3. Obese people are less likely to be hired than
average-weight people.
Reality
-Studies show that obese people are more often
disqualified from being hired and less often
nominated for supervisory positions.
-These findings are most pronounced in obese
females.
Please return to your seats!
Implicit Bias
“The attitudes or stereotypes that affect our
understanding, actions, and decisions in an
unconscious manner.”
- Cause us to have feelings and attitudes about
other people based on characteristics such as
race, ethnicity, age, and appearance.
- Develop over the course of a lifetime through
exposure to direct and indirect messages.
Key Characteristics
• Pervasive. Everyone possesses them, even people
with commitments to impartiality such as judges.
• Different from Explicit bias. Could be related though.
• Don’t necessarily align with declared beliefs or even
reflect stances we would explicitly endorse.
• Generally tend to favor our own ingroup, though
research has shown that we can still hold implicit
biases against our ingroup.
• Malleable. Implicit associations that we have formed
can be gradually unlearned through a variety of
debiasing techniques.
Implicit Bias
and
Perceptions of Crime…
Imagine…I
You are walking in a public park near Ballard and
see someone with a pair of bolt cutters trying
to cut off a bike chain.
What would your initial reaction be? What
would you think they were doing?
Thief or Owner?
Take out your note card. (You won’t be turning it
in)
Number from 1- 10 and write down either a T or
an O for your INITIAL reaction.
Discussion Time!
“What Would You Do? The Bike Thief”
Video
What could be causing these differences?
The Impact of Implicit Bias on
Convictions and Sentences…
Opinion Poll
5. If a black person and a white person are
accused of the same crime, they have an
equal chance of getting convicted.
Reality
Studies show that:
1.With at least one black member in the jury pool:
Conviction rates were almost identical for blacks
and whites.
2. Without any black members in the jury pool:
Black defendants were significantly more likely
than whites to be convicted.
Opinion Poll
6. If a girl and boy are convicted of the same
crime, they should get the same jail sentence.
Reality
Studies show:
1. Men receive 63% longer sentences on average
than women do
AND
2. Women are twice as likely to avoid
incarceration if convicted.”
Opinion Poll
7. If a 60-year-old and a 22-year-old are
convicted of the same crime, the 60- year-old
should receive a shorter sentence.
Reality
-Studies show
1.Individuals ages 21-25 receive the harshest
sentences, followed by ages 26-29.
2.Young offenders ages 18-20 receive sentences
similar to those in their 30s and 40s.
(Moderate sentences)
3.Offenders ages 50 and above receive the most
lenient sentences.
Combatting Implicit Bias
Journal write…