Stipek D, Recchia S, McClintic S
University of California, Los Angeles.
Monogr Soc Res Child Dev. 1992;57(1):1-98.
A series of studies was conducted to examine the development of self-evaluation in children aged 1-5 years. Developmental changes in children's reactions to achievement-related outcomes were assessed in a variety of contexts, using different tasks and different criteria for success. The first study of 1-3-year-olds revealed an increased social orientation after the age of 21 months. Only children over this age were more likely to look up at the experimenter after they had produced an outcome themselves than after the same outcome had been produced by the experimenter. These older children were also more likely than younger children to call their mothers' attention to their achievements in a free-play situation. In a second study, on a task with visibly salient success versus failure outcomes, children aged 2-5 years responded to success with positive affect (e.g., smiling) and to failure with avoidance reactions (e.g., looking away from the experimenter). Praise enhanced children's positive affective reactions to success, but its effect was modest. In the final study, winning or losing on a competitive task was not understood by children below age 33 months and had no effect on their affective reactions to the task. In contrast, winning enhanced older children's pleasure in completing the task. Three stages are proposed in the development of self-evaluation. In the first stage, children experience joy in causality, but they lack the cognitive representational skills required for self-evaluation in a self-reflective sense, and they do not anticipate others' reactions to their performance. In the second stage, beginning before the age of 2 years, children anticipate adult reactions, seeking positive reactions to their successes and endeavoring to avoid negative reactions to failure. The proposed third stage involves a gradual internalization of external reactions, with children beginning to evaluate their performance and react emotionally to success and failure independently of their expectations of adult reactions. Although all studies focused on achievement outcomes, the development of self-evaluation in the moral domain may parallel this developmental sequence proposed for the achievement domain. It is also proposed that caretakers' reactions to rule violations might engender concerns about meeting adult expectations in achievement contexts.
开展了一系列研究以考察1至5岁儿童自我评价的发展情况。在各种情境下,运用不同任务和不同成功标准,对儿童在与成就相关结果上的反应的发展变化进行了评估。对1至3岁儿童的第一项研究显示,21个月大之后社交倾向增强。只有这个年龄以上的儿童在自己产生一个结果后比实验者产生同样结果后更有可能抬头看实验者。这些年龄较大的儿童在自由玩耍情境中也比年龄较小的儿童更有可能让母亲注意到他们的成就。在第二项研究中,在一个成功与失败结果明显突出的任务中,2至5岁的儿童对成功表现出积极情绪(如微笑),对失败则表现出回避反应(如把目光从实验者身上移开)。表扬增强了儿童对成功的积极情绪反应,但其效果不大。在最后一项研究中,33个月以下的儿童不理解在竞争性任务中输赢的意义,且输赢对他们对该任务的情绪反应没有影响。相比之下,获胜增强了年龄较大儿童完成任务的愉悦感。自我评价的发展提出了三个阶段。在第一阶段,儿童在因果关系中体验到快乐,但他们缺乏自我反思意义上自我评价所需的认知表征技能,也不会预期他人对自己表现的反应。在第二阶段,从2岁前开始,儿童预期成人的反应,寻求对其成功的积极反应,并努力避免对失败的消极反应。所提出的第三阶段涉及外部反应的逐渐内化,儿童开始独立于对成人反应的预期来评估自己的表现,并对成功和失败做出情绪反应。尽管所有研究都集中在成就结果上,但道德领域自我评价的发展可能与为成就领域提出的这个发展序列相似。还提出照顾者对违规行为的反应可能会引发儿童在成就情境中对满足成人期望的担忧。