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  1. 19 wrz 2022 · In 1968, schoolteacher Jane Elliott decided to divide her classroom into students with blue eyes and students with brown eyes. The experiment, known as Blue Eyes Brown Eyes experiment, is regarded as an eye-opening way for children to learn about racism and discrimination.

  2. 25 lut 2022 · A second look at the blue-eyes, brown-eyes experiment that taught third-graders about racism. In this 1998 photograph, former Iowa teacher Jane Elliott, center, speaks with two Augsburg...

  3. 21 gru 2022 · Jane Elliott's Blue Eyes and Brown Eyes experiment was a turning point in social psychology. In this article, we'll explain what happened during the experiment and discuss its consequences.

  4. The Blue Eyes/Brown Eyes Experiment, conducted by educator Jane Elliott in 1968, profoundly influenced our understanding of prejudice and discrimination. This pioneering exercise aimed to simulate the effects of racism by dividing participants based on an arbitrary characteristic—eye color.

  5. 22 lis 2022 · Listen to Michael Shermer’s conversation with Stephen Bloom exploring the never-before-told true story of Jane Elliott and the “Blue-Eyes, Brown-Eyes Experiment” she made world-famous, using eye color to simulate racism.

  6. 11 lis 2015 · Blue-eyed people are better than brown-eyed people. It was a daring experiment in prejudice. I watched wonderful, thoughtful children turn into nasty, vicious, discriminating little third graders.

  7. Challenges to Ending Racism. Blue Eyes, Brown Eyes Exercise. Elliott came to prominence when, the day after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, she took her classroom of all-white third graders in Riceville, Iowa, and decided to teach them what it was like to face discrimination.