Midgette Allegra J, Coffman Jennifer L, Hussong Andrea M
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute & Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Chapel Hill, NC USA.
University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Department of Human Development and Family Studies, Greensboro, NC USA.
J Child Fam Stud. 2022 May;31(5):1261-1275. doi: 10.1007/s10826-021-02222-9. Epub 2022 Jan 4.
Parent-child conversations are a widely recognized socializing mechanism, linked to children's developing moral agency, empathy, and emotional competence. Similarly, parent-child conversations about gratitude have been linked to growth in children's gratitude. However, the messages that parents and children exchange in conversations about children's gratitude have yet to be investigated in depth. In the current study, we investigate the types of events that parents discuss with their children during times when they saw displays of children's gratitude and events when the children missed the opportunity to display gratitude, along with the messages that parents and children share during these conversations. The study involved a thematic analysis of the gratitude conversations of 43 parent-child dyads (88% mothers, 77% European American, 51% boys, child M=10.62, SD=1.15) living in the United States. Gratitude and missed opportunity events primarily involved situations in which the child had the opportunity to attend an event or to receive a material gift, food, or assistance. Three themes characterized parent and child messages. First, parents suggested that being happy was a sign of being grateful, a way to make others happy, and the goal of benefactors' behavior. Second, parents suggested that children should focus on what they receive rather than on what they did not receive. Finally, children conveyed that they could not always be grateful, but that in several cases they were able to both feel and display their excitement and gratitude. In particular, children reported feeling grateful when they received something they thought was special or enjoyable, unique or unexpected, that they knew would make their parent happy or that they felt lucky to have since others did not have it. Together these findings suggest the importance of future research investigating how children and parents coordinate and prioritize the various elements of gratitude moments in deciding how to be grateful and to socialize children's gratitude.
亲子对话是一种广为人知的社交机制,与儿童道德行为、同理心和情绪能力的发展相关。同样,亲子间关于感恩的对话与儿童感恩之心的成长有关。然而,父母与孩子在关于儿童感恩的对话中所交流的信息尚未得到深入研究。在本研究中,我们调查了父母与孩子讨论孩子表达感恩的时刻以及孩子错过表达感恩机会的时刻所涉及的事件类型,以及父母与孩子在这些对话中分享的信息。该研究对居住在美国的43对亲子(88%为母亲,77%为欧美裔,51%为男孩,孩子平均年龄M = 10.62,标准差SD = 1.15)的感恩对话进行了主题分析。感恩和错过机会的事件主要涉及孩子有机会参加活动或收到物质礼物、食物或帮助的情况。父母和孩子的信息有三个主题特征。首先,父母表示快乐是感恩的一种表现,是让他人快乐的一种方式,也是施恩者行为的目标。其次,父母建议孩子应该关注他们所得到的,而不是他们没有得到的。最后,孩子们表示他们并非总能心怀感恩,但在某些情况下,他们能够感受到并表达自己的兴奋和感激之情。特别是,孩子们报告说,当他们收到他们认为特别或有趣、独特或意想不到的东西,知道会让父母开心的东西,或者因为别人没有而觉得自己很幸运得到的东西时,他们会心怀感激。这些研究结果共同表明,未来研究调查儿童和父母如何在决定如何感恩以及如何培养孩子的感恩之心时协调并优先考虑感恩时刻的各种要素具有重要意义。