Robert Lee Williams was born in Biscoe, Arkansas on February 20, 1930. His father, Robert L. Williams, worked as a millwright and died when his son was just five years old. Williams’ mother, Rosie L. Williams, worked in the homes of white families until her death in 1978. He has one sister, Dorothy Jean. He married Ava L. Kemp in 1948, at the age of 18. They had eight children, 17 grandchildren, and 13 great grandchildren. His eight college-educated children include four psychologists, a nurse, a journalist, a teacher, and a leather craftswoman.
Williams worked as a staff psychologist at Arkansas State Hospital, the first African-American psychologist to be hired at a state mental health facility in Arkansas. He later served as chief psychologist, at the Jefferson BarracksVeterans Affairs Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri, director of a hospital improvement project in Spokane, Washington, and a consultant for the National Institute of Mental Health. In 1968 he was a founding member of the National Association of Black Psychologists, and served as its second president. While serving as President of the Association of Black Psychologists, he created The 10 Point Plan and mailed it to 300 colleges and universities. This Plan was instrumental in recruiting and sustaining Black graduate students in Masters and Ph.D. psychology programs throughout the United States. From 1970 to 1992 he served as a professor of psychology and African and African-American Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. He founded the department of Black Studies at Washington University and served as its first director, developing a curriculum that would serve as a model throughout the country.
Black Intelligence Test of Cultural Homogeneity (BITCH)
Williams created the Black Intelligence Test of Cultural Homogeneity by drawing from a glossary of African-American speech and personal experience. “Danger: Testing and De-humanizing Black Children” Though structured similarly to traditional IQ testing, European Americans scored consistently lower on the BITCH than African Americans. Williams did not conclude, as had white psychologists, that this proved the intellectual inferiority of European Americans.
He created the term "Ebonics" to refer to African-American English on January 26, 1973 at a conference called “The Cognitive and Language Development of Black Children”. In 1975 he edited a book entitled , which explained the African roots of Ebonics and refuted the popular conception that Ebonics was simply slang or deficient English.
Black Personality Theory
Williams formulated his "Black Personality Theory," presented in his second book, The Collective Mind: Toward an Afrocentric Theory of Black Personality. His theory argued that black personality cannot be understood using European philosophy and values. Instead the Black Personality Theory would draw on an African philosophy of collectiveness diametrically opposed to Western individualism.
Racial scripting
He argued that white children acquire racist predispositions at a young age through the process of “racial scripting”. In this work, he identifies a number of myths and stereotypes that form these racial scripts, including: the myth of black genetic deficiency; the deteriorating black family; cultural deprivation; black language deficiency; black self-hatred; damaged black psyche; the superior sexual stud; the superior black athlete; and the lazy Negro. He argues that these myths and attitudes form a racial "script" or schema, which the adult person draws upon to understand situations. Thus racial scripting received in childhood can shape the conceptions of reality of an adult.
Popular exposure
Williams appeared in the public eye on numerous occasions, including television appearances with Dan Rather, Phil Donahue, and Montel Williams. His work has been cited by many major newspapers, and served as a theme for an episode of Good Times.
Works
, Institute of Black Studies, 1975
The Collective Mind: Toward an Afrocentric Theory of Black Personality