Faculty Sponsor
Dr. Tes Tuason and Dr. Lynne Carroll
Faculty Sponsor College
Brooks College of Health
Faculty Sponsor Department
Public Health
Location
SOARS Virtual Conference
Presentation Website
https://unfsoars.domains.unf.edu/visibility-of-whiteness-analyzing-white-privilege-among-female-counseling-trainees/
Keywords
SOARS (Conference) (2020 : University of North Florida) -- Posters; University of North Florida. Office of Undergraduate Research; University of North Florida. Graduate School; College students – Research -- Florida – Jacksonville -- Posters; University of North Florida – Graduate students – Research -- Posters; University of North Florida. Department of Public Health -- Research -- Posters; Health Sciences -- Research – Posters
Abstract
Interracial dialogues about racial issues are often accompanied by anger, anxiety and guilt. For example, the notion of Whiteness as a privileged status frequently provokes strong negative affect and denial in White persons (Sue, David Rivera, Capodilupo, Lin, & Torino, 2010; Powell, Branscombe, & Schmitt, 2005). McClelland and Linnander (2006) found that interpersonal contact is an important factor in changing racial attitudes among White counseling trainees. The current study sought to examine white female counseling trainees’ written reflections following a personal one-on-one dialogue with culturally different interviewees. Seventeen graduate counseling trainees who self-identified as White and were enrolled in a moderate sized university in the southeastern United States during the years 2003-2008, were participants. Their ages ranged from 23-45, with a mean of 29.94. Using constructivist theory as research paradigm and consensual qualitative research analysis as methodology, the 4 domains analyzed were: a) counseling trainees’ acknowledgement that their Whiteness was “limiting” and resulted in their personal biases, b) counseling trainees’ awareness of the fact that White privilege and racism are experienced differently depending on other social group memberships one holds, including gender, sexual orientation and socio-economic status, c) a heightened awareness of their emotional responses in the interview context such as shock, denial of racism, sadness, guilt associated with being White and privileged, sympathy for what their interviewees have experienced, gratitude for their interviewees’ openness, and amazement of their life stories, and d) owning White Privilege coincided with a heightened sense of resolve to be multiculturally competent.
Included in
Visibility of Whiteness: Analyzing White Privilege among Female Counseling Trainees
SOARS Virtual Conference
Interracial dialogues about racial issues are often accompanied by anger, anxiety and guilt. For example, the notion of Whiteness as a privileged status frequently provokes strong negative affect and denial in White persons (Sue, David Rivera, Capodilupo, Lin, & Torino, 2010; Powell, Branscombe, & Schmitt, 2005). McClelland and Linnander (2006) found that interpersonal contact is an important factor in changing racial attitudes among White counseling trainees. The current study sought to examine white female counseling trainees’ written reflections following a personal one-on-one dialogue with culturally different interviewees. Seventeen graduate counseling trainees who self-identified as White and were enrolled in a moderate sized university in the southeastern United States during the years 2003-2008, were participants. Their ages ranged from 23-45, with a mean of 29.94. Using constructivist theory as research paradigm and consensual qualitative research analysis as methodology, the 4 domains analyzed were: a) counseling trainees’ acknowledgement that their Whiteness was “limiting” and resulted in their personal biases, b) counseling trainees’ awareness of the fact that White privilege and racism are experienced differently depending on other social group memberships one holds, including gender, sexual orientation and socio-economic status, c) a heightened awareness of their emotional responses in the interview context such as shock, denial of racism, sadness, guilt associated with being White and privileged, sympathy for what their interviewees have experienced, gratitude for their interviewees’ openness, and amazement of their life stories, and d) owning White Privilege coincided with a heightened sense of resolve to be multiculturally competent.
https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/soars/2020/spring_2020/135