Published August 2024
| Version v1
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Black and White: How Motivated Beliefs in Racial Inequality Impact Educational Perceptions, ROI, and Behavior
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Description
Abstract: This study examines Black and White American student's perceptions of the return on investment (ROI) of a college education and examines how material on racial inequality impacts information-seeking behaviors around the ROI of a college education. The survey results suggest that Black American students underestimate their group's educational returns and overestimate those of White Americans, while the experiment demonstrates that Black Americans over-select information on racial and economic inequalities over objective data, even when provided financial incentives to choose the latter. Taken together, these results highlight a growing misperception within the Black American community about the economic returns to a college education, perhaps fueled by racially charged content that highlights systemic economic inequalities. These results highlight how key decision-making around attending college can be based on mis- calibrated perceptions about the interplay between racial inequality and individual economic outcomes. Further research is needed to understand the nuances in Black American's decision-making around higher education and how their beliefs of racial inequality interplay with this decision.
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Black and White- How Motivated Beliefs in Racial Inequality Impact Educational Perceptions, ROI, and Behavior.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:13102
Funding
- The Normal Lab