Zhao Xin, Kushnir Tamar
Department of Human Development, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Department of Human Development, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2018 Jan;165:101-116. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2017.04.004. Epub 2017 May 8.
Young children demonstrate awareness of normativity in various domains of social learning. It is unclear, however, whether children recognize that rules can be changed in certain contexts and by certain people or groups. Across three studies, we provided empirical evidence that children consider individual authority and collective agreement when reasoning about who can change rules. In Study 1, children aged 4-7years watched videos of children playing simply sorting and stacking games in groups or alone. Across conditions, the group game was initiated (a) by one child, (b) by collaborative agreement, or (c) by an adult authority figure. In the group games with a rule initiated by one child, children attributed ability to change rules only to that individual and not his or her friends, and they mentioned ownership and authority in their explanations. When the rule was initiated collaboratively, older children said that no individual could change the rule, whereas younger children said that either individual could do so. When an adult initiated the rule, children stated that only the adult could change it. In contrast, children always endorsed a child's decision to change his or her own solitary rule and never endorsed any child's ability to change moral and conventional rules in daily life. Age differences corresponded to beliefs about friendship and agreement in peer play (Study 2) and disappeared when the decision process behind and normative force of collaboratively initiated rules were clarified (Study 3). These results show important connections between normativity and considerations of authority and collaboration during early childhood.
幼儿在社会学习的各个领域都表现出对规范性的认知。然而,尚不清楚儿童是否认识到规则在某些情况下以及由某些人或群体可以改变。在三项研究中,我们提供了实证证据,表明儿童在思考谁可以改变规则时会考虑个人权威和集体共识。在研究1中,4至7岁的儿童观看了儿童单独或分组玩简单分类和堆叠游戏的视频。在不同条件下,小组游戏由(a)一个孩子发起,(b)通过合作协议发起,或(c)由成人权威人物发起。在由一个孩子发起规则的小组游戏中,儿童将改变规则的能力仅归因于该个体,而不是他或她的朋友,并且他们在解释中提到了所有权和权威。当规则是通过合作发起时,年龄较大的孩子说没有个体可以改变规则,而年龄较小的孩子说任何一个个体都可以这样做。当由成人发起规则时,儿童表示只有成人可以改变它。相比之下,儿童总是认可孩子改变自己单独规则的决定,并且从不认可任何孩子在日常生活中改变道德和常规规则的能力。年龄差异与关于同伴游戏中的友谊和共识的信念相对应(研究2),并且当合作发起的规则背后的决策过程和规范力量得到澄清时消失(研究3)。这些结果表明了幼儿期规范性与权威和合作考量之间的重要联系。