Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research

Existing research from the social sciences indicates that misperceptions about immigrants are pervasive in American society and present consequences for intergroup relations. The classroom may be an arena in which to reduce this incorrectness. The current note provides a replication and extension of...

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Main Author: Daniel Herda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Numeracy Network 2019-07-01
Series:Numeracy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol12/iss2/art11
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author Daniel Herda
author_facet Daniel Herda
author_sort Daniel Herda
collection DOAJ
description Existing research from the social sciences indicates that misperceptions about immigrants are pervasive in American society and present consequences for intergroup relations. The classroom may be an arena in which to reduce this incorrectness. The current note provides a replication and extension of previous research on the effectiveness of the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise (CME) ─ an in-class demographic guessing game in which students provide their perceptions of some demographic reality and compare it to an objective data source. This analysis builds upon earlier work by 1) considering immigrants as a new demographic category of focus; 2) simultaneously analyzing cardinal misperceptions of the immigrant population size (population innumeracy) and ordinal mischaracterizations of immigrants’ most common country of origin; and 3) by comparing low-tech and high-tech versions of the CME. Perceptions measured during the game are compared to those measured in a post-test occurring three weeks later. Results indicate that participation in the game improves both types of misperceptions. However, they technology-based CME utilizing student response systems (Socrative) does not provide any additional purchase beyond a low-tech, paper-and-pencil delivery.
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spelling doaj.art-525efa68d2d048b7a68bc5d7e40c62d72022-12-21T19:57:12ZengNational Numeracy NetworkNumeracy1936-46602019-07-01122https://doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.12.2.11Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous ResearchDaniel Herda0Merrimack CollegeExisting research from the social sciences indicates that misperceptions about immigrants are pervasive in American society and present consequences for intergroup relations. The classroom may be an arena in which to reduce this incorrectness. The current note provides a replication and extension of previous research on the effectiveness of the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise (CME) ─ an in-class demographic guessing game in which students provide their perceptions of some demographic reality and compare it to an objective data source. This analysis builds upon earlier work by 1) considering immigrants as a new demographic category of focus; 2) simultaneously analyzing cardinal misperceptions of the immigrant population size (population innumeracy) and ordinal mischaracterizations of immigrants’ most common country of origin; and 3) by comparing low-tech and high-tech versions of the CME. Perceptions measured during the game are compared to those measured in a post-test occurring three weeks later. Results indicate that participation in the game improves both types of misperceptions. However, they technology-based CME utilizing student response systems (Socrative) does not provide any additional purchase beyond a low-tech, paper-and-pencil delivery.https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol12/iss2/art11population innumeracydemographicsimmigrantsstudent response systemsmisperceptions
spellingShingle Daniel Herda
Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research
Numeracy
population innumeracy
demographics
immigrants
student response systems
misperceptions
title Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research
title_full Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research
title_fullStr Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research
title_short Teaching Demographic Ignorance with the Correcting Misperceptions Exercise: A Replication and Extension of Previous Research
title_sort teaching demographic ignorance with the correcting misperceptions exercise a replication and extension of previous research
topic population innumeracy
demographics
immigrants
student response systems
misperceptions
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol12/iss2/art11
work_keys_str_mv AT danielherda teachingdemographicignorancewiththecorrectingmisperceptionsexerciseareplicationandextensionofpreviousresearch