Department of Psychology, Eskişehir Osmangazi University, Eskişehir, Türkiye.
Human Development and Quantitative Methodology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA.
Dev Sci. 2024 Sep;27(5):e13440. doi: 10.1111/desc.13440. Epub 2023 Aug 26.
This study investigated children's and adolescents' reasoning about intergroup exclusion based on social class from educational opportunities in Türkiye. The role of children's and adolescents' perceived contact with friends from different socioeconomic backgrounds on their evaluations of exclusion and personal solutions to the exclusion was also examined. Participants (N = 270) included 142 children (8-10 years old, M = 9.80; SD = 0.82; 53.5% girls) and 128 adolescents (14-16 years old, M = 15.46; SD = 0.91, 61.7% girls) from lower (N = 144) and higher (N = 126) socioeconomic backgrounds. Results showed that while most participants viewed social class-based exclusion as wrong, adolescents were more likely to view it as wrong than were children. Adolescents from lower SES approached social class-based exclusion as less acceptable than did adolescents from higher SES who referred to expectations about conformity to authority and the status quo. Moderation analyses showed that for adolescents from higher SES, higher perceived contact with friends from lower SES was associated with decreased acceptability of exclusion and increased motivation to provide equity. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: Overall, adolescents living in a country with economic instability evaluated social class-based exclusion from educational opportunities among peers as unfair and wrong. Adolescents from lower SES viewed social class-based exclusion as less acceptable than did adolescents from higher SES. Adolescents from higher SES expected that excluders' intentions were motivated by conforming to authority and supporting the status quo more frequently than did children. For adolescents from higher SES, perceived contact with friends from lower SES was associated with decreased acceptability of exclusion and increased motivation to provide equity.
本研究调查了儿童和青少年基于土耳其教育机会的社会阶层对群体排斥的推理。还研究了儿童和青少年对来自不同社会经济背景的朋友的感知接触对其排斥评价和个人排斥解决方案的影响。参与者(N=270)包括 142 名儿童(8-10 岁,M=9.80;SD=0.82;53.5%女孩)和 128 名青少年(14-16 岁,M=15.46;SD=0.91,61.7%女孩),分别来自较低(N=144)和较高(N=126)社会经济背景。结果表明,虽然大多数参与者认为基于社会阶层的排斥是错误的,但青少年比儿童更有可能认为这种排斥是错误的。来自较低 SES 的青少年认为基于社会阶层的排斥不太可接受,而来自较高 SES 的青少年则认为这是对权威和现状的期望。调节分析表明,对于来自较高 SES 的青少年来说,与来自较低 SES 的朋友的感知接触越高,对排斥的接受度越低,提供公平的动机就越强。研究亮点:总体而言,生活在经济不稳定的国家的青少年认为同伴之间基于教育机会的社会阶层排斥是不公平和错误的。来自较低 SES 的青少年认为基于社会阶层的排斥比来自较高 SES 的青少年更不可接受。与儿童相比,来自较高 SES 的青少年更频繁地期望排斥者的意图是为了迎合权威和支持现状。对于来自较高 SES 的青少年来说,与来自较低 SES 的朋友的感知接触与排斥的可接受性降低和提供公平的动机增强有关。