Department of Psychology, University of Toronto.
Centre for Child Development, Mental Health, and Policy, University of Toronto Mississauga.
Monogr Soc Res Child Dev. 2020 Sep;85(3):7-99. doi: 10.1111/mono.12417.
Respect is an integral part of everyday life. It is a virtue central to the aim of living an ethically good life. Despite its importance, little is known about its emergence, development, correlates, and consequences. In this monograph, we aim to fill this gap by presenting empirical work on children's and adolescents' thinking and feelings about respect. Specifically, we examined the development of respect in ethnically diverse samples of children between the ages of 5 and 15 years (N = 476). Using a narrative and semi-structured interview, as well as self-, caregiver- and teacher-reports, and peer-nominations, we collected information on children's respect conceptions and reasoning, as well as on the social-emotional correlates and prosocial and aggressive behavioral outcomes of respect. We begin with a review of theoretical accounts on respect. This includes a selective overview of the history of respect in philosophy and psychology in Chapter I. Here, we discuss early writings and conceptualizations of respect across the seminal works of Kant and others. We then provide an account of the various ways in which respect is conceptualized across the psychological literature. In Chapter II, we review extant developmental theory and research on respect and its development, correlates, and behavioral consequences. In this chapter, as part of our developmental framework, we discuss how respect is related and distinct from other emotions such as sympathy and admiration. Next, we describe our methodology (Chapter III). This includes a summary of our research aims, samples, and measures used for exploring this novel area of research. Our primary goals were to examine how children and adolescents conceptualize respect, how their conceptualizations differ by age, whether and to what degree children feel respect toward others' "good" behavior (i.e., respect evaluations for behavior rooted in ethical norms of kindness, fairness, and personal achievement goals), and how children's respect is related to other ethical emotions and behaviors. The next three chapters provide a summary of our empirical findings. Chapter IV showcases our prominent results on the development of children's conceptions of respect. Results revealed that children, across age, considered prosociality to be the most important component involved in conceptualizations of respect. We also found age-related increases in children's beliefs about fairness as a core component of respect. Children and adolescents also reported feeling higher levels of respect for behavior in the ethical domain (e.g., sharing fairly and inclusion) than behavior in the personal domain (i.e., achieving high grades in school). Chapter V investigates how sympathy and feelings of sadness over wrongdoing relate to respect conceptions and respect for behavior. Our findings show that sadness over wrongdoing was positively associated with adolescents' fairness conceptions of respect. Sympathy was positively related to children's feelings of respect toward others' ethical behavior. In Chapter VI, we present links between respect and social behavior. Our findings provide some evidence that children's feelings of respect are positively linked with prosocial behavior and children's conceptions of respect (particularly those reflecting themes of fairness and equality) are negatively related to physical aggression. In the last two chapters, we discuss the empirical findings and their implications for practice and policy. In Chapter VII, we draw upon recent work in the field of social-emotional development to interpret our results and provide insight into how our findings extend previous seminal work on the development of respect from early childhood to adolescence. Finally, in Chapter VIII, we conclude by discussing implications for educational and clinical practice with children and adolescents, as well as social policies aimed at reducing discrimination and nurturing children's well-being and positive peer relationships.
尊重是日常生活的一个组成部分。它是道德生活的核心目标——生活有道德——的一个基本美德。尽管尊重很重要,但人们对它的出现、发展、相关性和后果知之甚少。在这本专著中,我们旨在通过呈现儿童和青少年对尊重的思考和感受的实证工作来填补这一空白。具体来说,我们考察了不同种族的 5 至 15 岁儿童(N=476)的尊重发展。我们使用叙事和半结构化访谈以及自我、照顾者和教师报告以及同伴提名,收集了有关儿童尊重概念和推理以及尊重的社会情感相关性以及亲社会和攻击性行为结果的信息。我们从尊重的理论观点综述开始。这包括在第一章中对哲学和心理学中尊重历史的选择性概述。在这里,我们讨论了 Kant 等人的开创性著作中尊重的早期著作和概念化。然后,我们提供了一个关于尊重在心理学文献中被概念化的各种方式的说明。在第二章中,我们回顾了尊重及其发展、相关性和行为后果的现有发展理论和研究。在这一章中,作为我们发展框架的一部分,我们讨论了尊重与其他情感(如同情和钦佩)的关系和区别。接下来,我们描述了我们的方法(第三章)。这包括总结我们的研究目的、样本和用于探索这一新研究领域的措施。我们的主要目标是研究儿童和青少年如何概念化尊重,他们的概念化如何随年龄而变化,以及他们是否以及在何种程度上对他人的“好”行为(即对根植于善良、公平和个人成就目标的伦理规范的行为的尊重评价)感到尊重,以及儿童的尊重与其他伦理情感和行为有何关系。接下来的三章提供了我们实证发现的摘要。第四章展示了我们关于儿童尊重概念发展的突出结果。结果表明,不同年龄的儿童都认为亲社会行为是尊重概念中最重要的组成部分。我们还发现,随着年龄的增长,儿童对公平的信念作为尊重的核心成分而增加。儿童和青少年还报告说,他们对道德行为(例如公平分享和包容)的尊重程度高于个人行为(例如在学校取得高分)。第五章调查了同情和对错误行为感到难过与尊重概念和尊重行为的关系。我们的研究结果表明,对错误行为的悲伤与青少年对尊重的公平概念有关。同情与儿童对他人道德行为的尊重感呈正相关。在第六章中,我们介绍了尊重与社会行为之间的联系。我们的研究结果提供了一些证据,表明儿童的尊重感与亲社会行为呈正相关,而儿童对尊重的概念化(特别是那些反映公平和平等主题的概念化)与身体攻击呈负相关。在最后两章中,我们讨论了实证发现及其对实践和政策的意义。在第七章中,我们借鉴了社会情感发展领域的最新研究成果来解释我们的研究结果,并深入了解我们的研究结果如何扩展了从儿童早期到青少年时期尊重发展的早期开创性研究。最后,在第八章中,我们通过讨论与儿童和青少年的教育和临床实践以及旨在减少歧视和培养儿童福祉和积极同伴关系的社会政策的影响来结束。