Literature DB >> 12795382

Conceptions of moral, social-conventional, and personal events among Chinese preschoolers in Hong Kong.

Jenny Yau1, Judith G Smetana.   

Abstract

Sixty-one Chinese preschoolers from Hong Kong at 2 ages (Ms = 4.36 and 6.00 years) were interviewed about familiar moral, social-conventional, and personal events. Children treated personal events as distinct from moral obligations and conventional regulations. Children judged the child as deciding personal issues, based on personal choice justifications, whereas children judged parents as deciding moral and conventional issues. With age, children granted increased decision-making power to the child. In contrast, children viewed moral transgressions as more serious, generalizably wrong, and wrong independent of authority than other events, based on welfare and fairness. Punishment-avoidance justifications for conventional events decreased with age, whereas conventional justifications increased. Young Chinese preschool children make increasingly differentiated judgments about their social world.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12795382     DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00560

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  7 in total

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Authors:  Jianjin Liu; Allegra J Midgette
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7.  What Makes Children Defy Majorities? The Role of Dissenters in Chinese and Spanish Preschoolers' Social Judgments.

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  7 in total

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