The ever-increasing presence of immigrants in Italian schools make these contexts important for the study of young peoples’ attitudes towards those who are new to a country. We analysed the metaphors regarding immigrants produced by a sample of 840 eighth-grade students. The results of a content analysis showed nine complex attitudes referring to different conceptual frames, such as adolescents’ perception of immigrants as part of a primary social group, as a source of possible wealth, as something troublesome or annoying, as a transient phenomenon that is unlikely to be integrated into society and various others. The results of a multinomial logistic regression indicated that boys have more feelings of annoyance as regard immigrants than girls. A higher socioeconomic background is associated with ambivalent attitudes toward immigrants (who are seen as being needy, as a resource but also as a threat). Possible behavioural implications of the adolescents’ views of minority social and cultural groups are discussed.

Alivernini, F., Cavicchiolo, E., Manganelli, S. (2019). Brothers, ants or thieves: students’ complex attitudes towards immigrants and the role of socioeconomic status and gender in shaping them. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 22, 629-647 [10.1007/s11218-019-09492-8].

Brothers, ants or thieves: students’ complex attitudes towards immigrants and the role of socioeconomic status and gender in shaping them

Cavicchiolo E.;
2019-01-01

Abstract

The ever-increasing presence of immigrants in Italian schools make these contexts important for the study of young peoples’ attitudes towards those who are new to a country. We analysed the metaphors regarding immigrants produced by a sample of 840 eighth-grade students. The results of a content analysis showed nine complex attitudes referring to different conceptual frames, such as adolescents’ perception of immigrants as part of a primary social group, as a source of possible wealth, as something troublesome or annoying, as a transient phenomenon that is unlikely to be integrated into society and various others. The results of a multinomial logistic regression indicated that boys have more feelings of annoyance as regard immigrants than girls. A higher socioeconomic background is associated with ambivalent attitudes toward immigrants (who are seen as being needy, as a resource but also as a threat). Possible behavioural implications of the adolescents’ views of minority social and cultural groups are discussed.
2019
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore M-PSI/03 - PSICOMETRIA
English
Adolescents
Attitudes towards immigrants
Gender
Metaphors
Socioeconomic status
Alivernini, F., Cavicchiolo, E., Manganelli, S. (2019). Brothers, ants or thieves: students’ complex attitudes towards immigrants and the role of socioeconomic status and gender in shaping them. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 22, 629-647 [10.1007/s11218-019-09492-8].
Alivernini, F; Cavicchiolo, E; Manganelli, S
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/324453
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