Name File Type Size Last Modified
Scott Indigenous Replication N321 v6 (restructured by experimental condition).sav application/x-spss-sav 394.6 KB 04/07/2025 03:40:PM
Templeton Experiment 2 Analysis Syntax.sps text/x-spss-syntax 8.9 KB 09/10/2023 05:52:PM
Templeton Experiment 2 Data Prep Syntax.sps text/x-spss-syntax 19.3 KB 09/14/2023 09:23:AM
Templeton Experiment 2 Descriptive and Preliminary Analysis.spv application/java-archive 143.8 KB 09/10/2023 05:51:PM
Templeton Experiment 2 Primary RQ Analysis.spv application/java-archive 214.2 KB 09/10/2023 05:59:PM
Templeton Experiment 2 Race_Ethnicity Outcomes Analysis.spv application/java-archive 97.6 KB 09/10/2023 07:22:PM

Project Citation: 

Templeton, Da’Shay. Bureaucratic representation may lead to less discriminatory outcomes for American Indian and Two Spirit youth: Evidence from an online experiment on school criminalization. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2025-04-07. https://doi.org/10.3886/E225861V1

Project Description

Summary:  View help for Summary This exploratory online experimental study examines the role of implicit racial and gender biases in school discipline disparities impacting American Indian and Two Spirit youth. Utilizing a mixed factorial design, the research investigates public perceptions regarding the justifiability of school disciplinary actions involving hypothetical scenarios of preschool student misbehavior. Participants, oversampled to include American Indian individuals, evaluated incidents varying by the student's race (American Indian vs. White American) and gender identity (Two Spirit vs. cisgender). Contrary to expectations, no significant differences were found in the evaluations of school personnel performance, perceived threat level of students, or perceived prejudice across conditions. These findings suggest the potential mitigating impact of bureaucratic representation, wherein demographic alignment between school personnel and students may reduce discriminatory outcomes. Implications emphasize the importance of enhancing representative bureaucracy in educational institutions to address systemic biases and reduce the school criminalization of marginalized populations, underscoring the need for further research on structural interventions



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