General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow silence can breed prejudice: Child development prof explains how/why to talk to kids about race
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/parenting/wp/2015/07/06/how-silence-can-breed-prejudice-a-child-development-professor-explains-how-and-why-to-talk-to-kids-about-race/(Re not talking to your kids about race in an attempt to be "color blind.)
These white parents are clearly well-intended in this approach, but a colorblind ideology may actually do more harm than good.
While parents may assume that their own egalitarian attitudes will rub off on their children, this is usually not the case. In one of my studies I found that children were more biased than their parents, and there was no direct association between the parents and childrens attitudes. Instead, the childrens attitudes matched their perceptions of the parents attitudes.
Almost half of the 5 to 7-year-old white children in the study said they did not know whether their parents liked black people, and about 35 percent either said that their parents would not approve of them having a black friend or they did not know if their parents would approve. This was despite the fact that their parents reported positive racial attitudes.
So in the absence of conversation, children are apt to make assumptions that may not be true, but these assumptions often reflect the biases the children are exposed to in the world around them. In other words, the silence can breed prejudice.

SheilaT
(23,156 posts)how to talk to them about race. We're white, and we lived in a very white city, Overland Park, Kansas. I could go days at a time without seeing a black person. There were literally two or three black kids in the neighborhood elementary school.
I did go with the color blind approach, and in a recent conversation with one of my two sons (they're now grown) he said that he and his friends thought it was totally stupid that we adults pretended that race wasn't out there. Looking back, I should have just spoken openly and casually.
They did get the message that we did not think white people were better, and that we were more than okay with them having friends from outside their own particular race or ethnicity.
elleng
(126,962 posts)Spreading this around.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)Fluid. Kids are that good.
xfundy
(5,105 posts)Some people are lighter, some are darker, some have almond-shaped eyes. They're all people, and those who want to divide us use those differences to their profit. I wish we'd just all have sex with each other so we become the same. Then, of course,religion would serve to divide us, and of course political BS.
gollygee
(22,336 posts)Since colonization anyway.
And it isn't going to magically go away. Human beings won't ever all become the same skin tone. We have to deal with this.
EllieBC
(2,810 posts)Like anything, children will learn from somewhere or someone. So, better from you!
gollygee
(22,336 posts)Not talking about it doesn't mean they aren't learning anything. It just means you aren't involved in the teaching.
EllieBC
(2,810 posts)Kids who are taught nothing tend to end up with higher rates of teen pregnancy, no?
Arkansas Granny
(31,344 posts)their grade school was predominantly black. I believe it was a good experience for them. They learned that color was just skin and underneath that we have many more similarities than differences.
gollygee
(22,336 posts)But everything seems to be re-segregated. Segregation is the way things are done again. We've definitely gone backward since the baby boomers stopped doing anti-racism work. Sadly, that's the last generation to do that work on a large scale.