Postscript after statistical simulation
In Spring 1995, I performed a ``statistical simulation"
in class 5/95, asking students to evaluate the weight and
value of various factors. This process uncovered a
a number of problems:
- We chose the weight of the variable, and had to estimate
it, and scale it.
- Some variables might have different weights at diff. times in our
history, and in different regions.
- We sometimes tended to reward/penalize a group twice for the same trait,
because the minus side of one variable may be the plus of another, i.e.
- Perceptions differ as to who Is a German, a Finn, a this a that: groups
may not see themselves as homogeneous; we rewarded e.g. Germans for something
that may not have been true for all Germans. There may be diff. kinds of
French speakers in Louisiana: Creole, Cajun, Black. Do they all get the same
points, e.g. for pre-revolutionary/pre-US experience as official lang?
- We often dealt in stereotypes, and rewarded our stereotypes: we had to
decide what is e.g. great cultural dis/similarity: Protestant vs. Catholic;
West european vs. East; Christian vs. non (Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist), white
vs. black, etc.
- The value/weight/definition of Cultural dis/similarity
changes as time goes on: early 19th c. notions of dissimilar (e.g. Catholic)
becomes less and less important as we approach the end of the 20th C. Now
being white may be enough to be similar, as compared to Black, Asian,
etc.
- Tolerance, e.g., expires, or may expire (e.g. for Spanish in
Calif.)
H. Schiffman, Instructor. Wed Oct 1 09:23:38 EDT 1997
Harold Schiffman
Wed Oct 1 09:23:33 EDT 1997