Monday, September 2, 2019
Experimenter Expectancy Effect On Children In A Classroom Setting :: essays research papers
 Experimenter Expectancy Effect On Children in a Classroom Setting      à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Rosenthal and Jacobson (1966) sought to test the experimenter expectancy  effect by examining how much of an outcome teachers' expectancies could have on  a group of children. Earlier investigations in this area were also conducted by  Rosenthal (1963). He worked with children in a research lab, giving each one a  rat and telling them it was either bred for intelligence or for dullness. The  children were put in charge of teaching the rats how to learn mazes.  Rosenthal's results showed that the rats that were believed by the students to  be smart, were able to learn the mazes much quicker. What the children did not  know, i.e., what Rosenthal had kept hidden, was that the rats were chosen at  random. There were no rats that were especially bright or dull. Another case  of the experimenter expectancy effect was that of the horse known as ââ¬Å"Clever  Hansâ⬠. It seemed to be able to read, spell, and solve math problems by kicking  his leg a number of times. The horse was tested and passed, but what the  experts did not realize was that their own hopes for the horse to answer the  questions, were giving the horse signs on which he based his answers. That is,  if someone on the committee raised his/her eyebrows in anticipation of the  oncoming correct answer, the horse would stop stomping. Once again, the  experimenter's cues decided the outcome of the tests. Acting on these results,  Rosenthal and Jacobson hypothesized that teacher's expectancies would cause them  unintentionally to treat the students they thought to be bright in a different  manner than those they thought to be average or even less bright.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Rosenthal and Jacobson used some materials that were important in the  completing their investigation. The experimenters used students and their  teachers as the subjects of their study. As part of their experiment, they even  chose which grades the students would be in. They also used Flanagan's Tests of  General Ability as a disguise to predict academic expectancies. The  experimenters did not use anything else in their experiment but instead let  their subjects do the rest. Rosenthal and Jacobson's goal was to see how  teachers would treat students whom they thought were of above average  intelligence in comparison to how they treated students whom they believed were  of below average intelligence.  à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  As with all experiments, there needed to be variables. In trying to  test teacher's expectancies, Rosenthal and Jacobson used labels for children as  their independent variable. The labels used were ââ¬Å"bloomersâ⬠ for children who  were expected to be above average, while the other group of children were    					    
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