Department of Education.
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Dev Psychol. 2020 Aug;56(8):1509-1517. doi: 10.1037/dev0000914.
We examined the development of sharing behavior of children (aged 6 to 12) within the unique, minority population of Christian Arab children in Israel (N = 319). Children had the opportunity to share candy with a needy or non-needy recipient. Parents' level of religiosity was assessed using the Duke University Religion Index questionnaire (DUREL). Results replicate previous research that focused primarily on the majority populations of the societies in question, by demonstrating an overall increase in the incidence of sharing with age. Furthermore-as previously found among the majority of Jewish children in Israel-the recipient's neediness moderated the association between household religiosity and sharing, such that religiosity predicted greater levels of sharing only when the recipient was described as "poor" (a child whose parents have little money), not when the prospective recipient was not specified as such. Finally, the neediness of the recipient increased the incidence of sharing regardless of age, suggesting that in this unique minority population, sensitivity to the recipient's neediness emerges already at the age of 6. We discuss possible mechanisms behind this developmental pattern. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
我们研究了以色列基督教阿拉伯儿童(N=319)这一独特少数民族群体中儿童分享行为的发展。孩子们有机会与有需要或无需要的接受者分享糖果。使用杜克大学宗教指数问卷(DUREL)评估父母的宗教信仰程度。研究结果复制了先前主要关注所研究社会的多数人群的研究,表明随着年龄的增长,分享的发生率总体上有所增加。此外——正如在以色列大多数犹太儿童中发现的那样——接受者的需求调节了家庭宗教信仰和分享之间的关系,使得只有当接受者被描述为“贫穷”(父母没有多少钱的孩子)时,宗教信仰才会预测更高水平的分享,而不是当预期的接受者没有被指定为贫穷时。最后,接受者的需求增加了分享的发生率,而与年龄无关,这表明在这个独特的少数民族群体中,对接受者需求的敏感性早在 6 岁时就已经出现。我们讨论了这种发展模式背后的可能机制。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2020 APA,保留所有权利)。