Heyman Gail D, Compton Brian J
Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0109, USA.
Dev Sci. 2006 Nov;9(6):616-27. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7687.2006.00540.x.
Children's sensitivity to context when making inferences about ability was investigated. In three studies, elementary school children (ages 5 to 10, total N = 332) were asked to reason about the relation between academic ability and the speed with which characters completed puzzle tasks. Participants were primed to interpret the characters' task completion rates with reference to either (1) the character's perceptions of the difficulty of the task, or (2) the character's level of effort on the task. Children who were primed to consider the perceived difficulty of the task were more likely to view ability as a static quality, a pattern of reasoning that included a tendency to associate task completion rates with ability, and to agree that not all individuals are capable of achieving high levels of success. These results provide evidence that even early elementary school children are sensitive to subtle contextual cues when making inferences about ability, and are consistent with the possibility that children make use of implicit cues available to them in their social environment to derive meaning from achievement situations.
研究了儿童在对能力进行推理时对情境的敏感性。在三项研究中,要求小学生(5至10岁,总样本量N = 332)推断学业能力与角色完成拼图任务的速度之间的关系。参与者被引导根据以下两种情况来解释角色的任务完成率:(1)角色对任务难度的认知,或(2)角色在任务上的努力程度。那些被引导考虑任务感知难度的儿童更有可能将能力视为一种静态特质,这种推理模式包括将任务完成率与能力联系起来的倾向,并认同并非所有人都能取得高水平的成功。这些结果表明,即使是小学低年级儿童在对能力进行推理时也对微妙的情境线索敏感,这与儿童利用社会环境中可得的隐含线索从成就情境中获取意义的可能性是一致的。