Stereotype threat and sports
Beilock, S. L., & McConnell, A. R. (2004). Stereotype threat and sport: Can athletic performance be threatened? Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 26, 597-609.
Stereotype threat occurs when knowledge of a negative stereotype about a
social group leads to less-than-optimal performance by members of that group.
Although the stereotype threat phenomenon has been extensively studied in
academic and cognitively-based tasks, it has received little attention in sport.
This article reviews the existent literature on stereotype threat and discusses
its implications for sports performance. The causal mechanisms of stereotype
threat in sport are examined, followed by a discussion of why the cognitive
processes thought to govern negative stereotype-induced performance decrements
in academic and cognitively based tasks (e.g., GRE or SAT tests) may
not unequivocally extend to sport skills. Finally, factors that should moderate
the impact of stereotype threat in sport are outlined. Because stereotype threat
has important consequences for athletics (e.g., impairing athletic performance,
maintaining the underrepresentation of minority athletes in certain sports), it
is a phenomenon that deserves greater attention in sport and exercise psychology
research.
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