The Obama effect: An experimental test |
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Authors: | Joshua Aronson Sheana Jannone Tanisha Johnson-Campbell |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Applied Psychology, New York University, 239 Greene St., 5th Floor, New York, New York 10012, USA b Department of Communication Studies, The University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station A1105, Austin, TX 78712, USA |
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Abstract: | Past research on stereotype threat and role model effects, as well as a recent quasi-experiment (Marx, Ho, & Freidman, this issue) suggested the possibility of an “Obama effect” on African American’s standardized test performance, whereby the salience of Barack Obama’s stereotype defying success could positively impact performance. We tested this reasoning in a randomized experiment with a broad sample of college students from across the country. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis that students prompted to think about Barack Obama prior to taking a difficult standardized verbal test would improve their performance relative to white students, and to African American students in control conditions that were not prompted to think about Obama. Our results did not support this hypothesis. Test scores were unaffected by prompts to think about Obama and no relationship was found between test performance and positive thoughts about Obama, a disconfirmation of both the findings and conclusions of the Marx, Ho, and Freidman study. |
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Keywords: | Stereotype threat Test performance Role models African Americans |
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