Simulation Games and Attitude Change

Attitudes Toward the Poor (Questionnaire Study 1)

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Last edited by MARC Bot
March 26, 2021 | History

Simulation Games and Attitude Change

Attitudes Toward the Poor (Questionnaire Study 1)

This investigation attempted to evaluate the effectiveness of the simulation game, Ghetto, in changing attitudes, and to determine whether effectiveness is associated with the personal characteristics of the players. There are two purposes: to teach factual information about the conditions faced by the urban poor in the inner city and to produce a more favorable attitude towards poverty. The entire homogeneous senior class in an all-boy catholic high school in Baltimore participated in the role playing. This simple one-group pretest and posttest questionnaire study was conducted as a part of a unit on poverty in eight social studies classes for four 55 minute periods. No other activities were allowed between pre and post-tests. A pretest self report item measured personal and vicarious experience with poverty. The greatest practical and statistically significant finding was that student attitudes were more favorable after the game than before. However, no increase in factual information and a small decline in interest were measured. Attitude change was positively correlated with vicarious experience with poverty, supporting Jerry L. Fletcher (1968). (There were no measures of long-term attitude change or teacher attitudes). (SBE).

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
21

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Edition Notes

Sponsoring Agency: Office of Education (DHEW), Washington, DC. Bureau of Research.

Contract Number: OEG-2-7-061610-0207.

Microfiche. [Washington D.C.]: ERIC Clearinghouse. microfiches : positive.

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[Place of publication not identified]

The Physical Object

Pagination
21 pages
Number of pages
21

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL32084415M
Internet Archive
centerforsocialo0118unse
OCLC/WorldCat
1061411009

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March 26, 2021 Created by MARC Bot import new book