French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment

This study investigated how Indian, French-Canadian, and English-Canadian schoolchildren see themselves and people in their environment. Fifty-six French-Canadians, forty-four English, and fifty-one Indians acted as subjects. Subjects were either in the 6th, 7th, 8th, or 9th grades. Their ages ra...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Simpson, Doris J.
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6186
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-6186
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-61862014-03-29T03:44:30Z French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment Simpson, Doris J. This study investigated how Indian, French-Canadian, and English-Canadian schoolchildren see themselves and people in their environment. Fifty-six French-Canadians, forty-four English, and fifty-one Indians acted as subjects. Subjects were either in the 6th, 7th, 8th, or 9th grades. Their ages ranged from ten to sixteen years. The Indian subjects were from the Fort Alexander Indian Reserve and the whites were from Powerview, Manitoba. Both communities are located about 80 miles north of Winnipeg. A pre-test was administered in which the subjects were asked to list and define all of the good and bad words used to describe people they know. Then the subjects were requested to list the five most significant people in their lives. From the pre-test results twelve words were selected. These twelve words were used as scales in the semantic differential which was the assessment instrument. Then the role titles of twelve people in the social environment whom all subjects would have formed an opinion toward were used as concepts. A questionnaire booklet of twelve pages was formed. On each page in the booklet was a concept of the role title of a person and twelve scale words and their bipolar opposites... The findings showed that Indian subjects did not differ significantly in self-perception from the French-Canadian or English-Canadian school-children... Both of the variables of age and sex groups revealed no significant differences on the self-perception concept when analyzed by the analysis of variance design. 2012-05-15T15:54:47Z 2012-05-15T15:54:47Z 1975 http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6186
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description This study investigated how Indian, French-Canadian, and English-Canadian schoolchildren see themselves and people in their environment. Fifty-six French-Canadians, forty-four English, and fifty-one Indians acted as subjects. Subjects were either in the 6th, 7th, 8th, or 9th grades. Their ages ranged from ten to sixteen years. The Indian subjects were from the Fort Alexander Indian Reserve and the whites were from Powerview, Manitoba. Both communities are located about 80 miles north of Winnipeg. A pre-test was administered in which the subjects were asked to list and define all of the good and bad words used to describe people they know. Then the subjects were requested to list the five most significant people in their lives. From the pre-test results twelve words were selected. These twelve words were used as scales in the semantic differential which was the assessment instrument. Then the role titles of twelve people in the social environment whom all subjects would have formed an opinion toward were used as concepts. A questionnaire booklet of twelve pages was formed. On each page in the booklet was a concept of the role title of a person and twelve scale words and their bipolar opposites... The findings showed that Indian subjects did not differ significantly in self-perception from the French-Canadian or English-Canadian school-children... Both of the variables of age and sex groups revealed no significant differences on the self-perception concept when analyzed by the analysis of variance design.
author Simpson, Doris J.
spellingShingle Simpson, Doris J.
French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
author_facet Simpson, Doris J.
author_sort Simpson, Doris J.
title French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
title_short French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
title_full French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
title_fullStr French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
title_full_unstemmed French-Canadian, English-Canadian, and native Indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
title_sort french-canadian, english-canadian, and native indian schoolchildren's perception of self and people in their social environment
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/6186
work_keys_str_mv AT simpsondorisj frenchcanadianenglishcanadianandnativeindianschoolchildrensperceptionofselfandpeopleintheirsocialenvironment
_version_ 1716658538112090112