Toward a more humane genetics education: Learning about the social and quantitative complexities of human genetic variation research could reduce racial bias in adolescent and adult populations

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Authors
Donovan, Brian M.
Semmens, Rob
Keck, Phillip
Brimhall, Elizabeth
Busch, K.C.
Weindling, Monica
Duncan, Alex
Stuhlsatz, Molly
Bracey, Zoë Buck
Bloom, Mark
Advisors
Second Readers
Subjects
Date of Issue
2019
Date
2019
Publisher
Wiley
Language
Abstract
When people are exposed to information that leads them to overestimate the actual amount of genetic difference between racial groups, it can augment their racial biases. However, there is apparently no research that explores if the reverse is possible. Does teaching adolescents scientifically accurate information about genetic variation within and between US census races reduce their racial biases? We randomized 8th and 9th grade students (n = 166) into separate classrooms to learn for an entire week either about the topics of (a) human genetic variation or (b) climate variation. In a cross-over randomized trial with clustering, we demonstrate that when students learn about genetic variation within and between racial groups it significantly changes their perceptions of human genetic variation, thereby causing a significant decrease in their scores on instruments assessing cognitive forms of prejudice. We then replicate these findings in two computer-based randomized controlled trials, one with adults (n = 176) and another with biology students (n = 721, 9th-12th graders). These results indicate that teaching about human variation in the domain of genetics has potentially powerful effects on social cognition during adolescence. In turn, we argue that learning about the social and quantitative complexities of human genetic variation research could prepare students to become informed participants in a society where human genetics is invoked as a rationale in sociopolitical debates.
Type
Article
Description
The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1002/sce.21506
Series/Report No
Department
Systems Engineering (SE)
Organization
Naval Postgraduate School
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
Sponsors
National Science Foundation Grant No. 1660985
Funding
Grant No. 1660985
Format
32 p.
Citation
Donovan, Brian M., et al. "Toward a more humane genetics education: Learning about the social and quantitative complexities of human genetic variation research could reduce racial bias in adolescent and adult populations." Science Education 103.3 (2019): 529-560.
Distribution Statement
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
Collections