Development of Cooperation & Prosocial Behavior Flashcards
4 potential explanations to why the child open the cabinet?
- Exploring?
- Action script?
- Goal fulfilment?
- Prosocial?
Prosocial Behavior Overview? 4 main topics
- The Development of Prosocial Behavior
- Eisenberg’s Stages of Prosocial Behavior
- Socialising Prosocial Behavior
- Individual Differences in Prosocial Behavior
Key Concepts - Cooperation (from of prosocial behaviour)? (3)
- Is directed towards helping another
- Involves a risk or sacrifice to the actor
- Is voluntary
Prosocial Behaviour? Adults and development
- Adults generally want children to help others for altruistic motives
- These motives initially include empathy or sympathy for others and, at later ages, the desire to act in ways consistent with one’s own conscience and moral principles
Prosocial Behaviour? Two main concepts
The origins of altruistic prosocial behaviour are rooted in the capacity to feel empathy and sympathy.
- Empathy, is an emotional reaction to another’s emotional state that is similar to that person’s state
- Sympathy, is the feeling of concern for another person (or animal) in reaction to the other’s emotional sate or condition (by 2 years old)
Prosocial Behavior - What is an important factor contributing to empathy and sympathy?
The ability to take another’s perspective
- At about age 2, children start to more clearly differentiate between another’s emotional distress and their own, although their responses may still be egocentric
- 2-3 years of age, the frequency and variety of young children’s prosocial behaviours increase, although they do not regularly act in prosocial ways
- Children’s prosocial behaviours increase form the preschool years though adolescence
Eisenberg’s Stages of Prosocial Behavior?
- Prosocial Moral Dilemmas are used to determine prosocial behaviour (voluntary behaviour intended to benefit another, such as helping, sharing, and providing comfort)
- To study the development of prosocial moral development, Eisenberg presented children with stories in which the characters must choose between helping others and meeting their own needs.
- Identified fie stages of prosocial moral reasoning similar to Kohlberg’s stages
Prosocial Judgement, Level 1?
Level 1: Hedonistic, self-focused orientation
- Concerned with own interests
- Pre-school age
Prosocial Judgement, Level 2?
Level 2: Needs-based orientation
- Concerned with others’ needs even when they conflict with own needs
- Some pre-school and elementary school ages
Prosocial Judgement, Level 3?
Level 3: Approval and/or stereotyped orientation
- Decision to help based on ideas of “good” and “bad”
- Elementary school age
Prosocial Judgement, Level 4a?
Level 4a: Self-reflective empathic orientation
- Sympathetic responsiveness or role-taking; concern for others’ humanness
- Older elementary school and high school age
Prosocial Judgement, Level 4b?
Level 4b: Transitional level
- Internalise values, norms, responsibilities, concern for larger society -> doing this more consistently but not strong convictions
Prosocial Judgement, Level 5?
Level 5: Strongly internalised stage
- Everything is based on values, norms and responsibilities; desire to maintain obligations and improve society; belief in dignity of all individuals
- Passionately belief in cultural values
Environmental Factors effect on prosocial behviour?
- Supportive and constructive parenting is related to higher prosocial behavior
- Physical punishments, threats, and authorial parenting are related to lower sympathy and prosocial behavior
- Physical rewards for prosocial behavior or descries motivation later for prosocial behavior if the reward is not present
- Punishment for not using prosocial behavior leads the child to believe the reason for helping is to avoid own punishment
Fostering Proscoial Behaviour?
- Discipline involving reasoning fosters voluntary prosocial behavior, especially when the reasoning points out the consequences of the child’s behavior for others
- A primary environmental influence on children’s development of prosocial behaviour is their socialisation in the familiy.
- The values parents convey to their children may influence not only whether children are prosocial, but also toward whom they are prosocial
Values Learned from Parents by WWII Jewish Rescuers and Bysterades?
- The people who stood up and did something repotted being taught caring to a much larger degree
- Parents are differing in the values they teach their children which can have an effective on how their children behave or treat others
Other environmental factors, affecting pro-social behaviour?
Television and Video Games
- Most TV and video games have little prosocial content, but children who do watch prosocial TV tend to exhibit this behavior immediately after the show
- The effects are not long lasting, but are increased when parents role play the prosocial behavior seen on TV or provide the child with play material that reinforces the prosocial theme