Killen M, Pisacane K, Lee-Kim J, Ardila-Rey A
Department of Human Development, University of Maryland, College Park 20742-1131, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2001 Sep;37(5):587-96. doi: 10.1037//0012-1649.37.5.587.
Seventy-two children (35 4 1/2-year-olds and 37 5 1/2-year-olds), nearly evenly divided by gender, from European American (71%), Asian American (17%), and African American (12%) middle-class backgrounds, were individually interviewed about straightforward exclusion and inclusion for two gender-stereotypic peer-group contexts: activities (doll and truck play) and role-play (teacher and firefighter). All children evaluated straightforward exclusion based on gender (e.g., girls excluding a boy from doll play) as wrong and used moral reasons. Preliminary inclusion decisions in the activity contexts (choosing a boy or a girl to join the group) were based on stereotypic expectations, particularly for younger children. Given the opportunity to weigh alternative considerations, however, all children gave priority to fairness over stereotypic expectations in both multifaceted inclusion peer-group contexts.
72名儿童(35名4岁半儿童和37名5岁半儿童),性别分布几乎均匀,来自欧美裔(71%)、亚裔(17%)和非裔(12%)中产阶级家庭背景,针对两种性别刻板印象的同伴群体情境(活动:玩娃娃和卡车;角色扮演:教师和消防员)中直接的排斥和接纳情况接受了单独访谈。所有儿童都认为基于性别的直接排斥(如女孩在玩娃娃时排斥男孩)是错误的,并给出了道德理由。在活动情境中(选择一名男孩或女孩加入群体)的初步接纳决定基于刻板印象预期,尤其是对年幼的儿童而言。然而,在有机会权衡其他因素时,所有儿童在多方面的接纳同伴群体情境中都将公平置于刻板印象预期之上。