Killen M, Stangor C
Department of Human Development, University of Maryland, College Park 20742-1131, USA.
Child Dev. 2001 Jan-Feb;72(1):174-86. doi: 10.1111/1467-8624.00272.
This study investigated whether children's and adolescents' judgments about exclusion of peers from peer group activities on the basis of their gender and race would differ by both age level and the context in which the exclusion occurred. Individual interviews about exclusion in several different contexts were conducted with 130 middle-class, European American children and adolescents. Younger children were expected to reject exclusion, by using judgments based on moral reasoning, regardless of the potential cost to group functioning, whereas older children were expected to condone exclusion on the basis of group membership in cases in which the inclusion of these children might interrupt effective group functioning. On measures of judgments, justifications for those judgments, and ratings of the appropriateness of exclusion, the vast majority of children used moral reasoning and rejected exclusion in contexts in which only the presence of a stereotype justified it. As expected, however, older children (13 years) were more likely to allow exclusion than younger children (7 and 10 years) when group functioning was threatened, and they justified this exclusion by using appeals to effective group functioning.
本研究调查了儿童和青少年基于同伴的性别和种族,对将其排除在同伴群体活动之外的判断,是否会因年龄水平和排除发生的背景而有所不同。对130名中产阶级欧美儿童和青少年进行了关于在几种不同背景下排除情况的个人访谈。预计年幼儿童会通过基于道德推理的判断来拒绝排除,而不考虑对群体功能的潜在代价,而年龄较大的儿童则预计会在这些儿童的加入可能会干扰群体有效运作的情况下,基于群体成员身份宽恕排除行为。在判断、这些判断的理由以及排除适当性的评分方面,绝大多数儿童使用道德推理,并在只有刻板印象存在才合理的背景下拒绝排除。然而,正如预期的那样,当群体功能受到威胁时,年龄较大的儿童(13岁)比年龄较小的儿童(7岁和10岁)更有可能允许排除,并且他们通过诉诸群体有效运作来为这种排除行为辩护。