Abstract
Exchanges of help between children are common and often have positive consequences. But not all help is equally beneficial, for example because some help does not provide an opportunity to practice and develop skills. Here I examine whether young children might perpetuate competence-based inequality by providing incompetent peers with less opportunity to practice and improve their skills compared to competent peers. Study 1 (N = 253, 6–9 years) shows that young children understand not all help is equally beneficial: Children think that peers who receive empowerment (hints) vs. non-empowerment (correct answers) help can learn more. Study 2 (N = 80) and 3 (N = 41) then assessed children’s (7–9 years) actual helping behavior in a lab-based experiment. Through a cover story, participants were introduced to two unknown, same-age children whom they later overheard were either good or not good at solving puzzles (Study 2) or math (Study 3). Subsequently, participants got to help both of them with a puzzle-quiz (Study 2) or a math-quiz (Study 3) by providing either empowerment or non-empowerment when they asked for help. Across both studies, children were more likely to provide empowerment help to competent peers, and non-empowerment help to incompetent peers. This work suggests that when young children perceive differences in competence (e.g., based on stereotypes), they contribute to maintaining the status quo by providing the most vulnerable students, that would profit the most from improving their skills, less opportunity to do so.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 41 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | npj Science of Learning |
Volume | 8 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 20 Sept 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:I would like to thank Julie Markerink, Eva Hordijk, Marijne Backelandt and Christel Klootwijk for their help with recruiting participants and data collection and Sander Thomaes for providing helpful feedback on an earlier version of this article. I am also grateful to all children and parents that participated in this research and NEMO Science Live for the opportunity to collect data. This work was supported by a VENI NWO grant (VI.Veni.191 G.052) awarded to J.S.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Springer Nature Limited.
Funding
I would like to thank Julie Markerink, Eva Hordijk, Marijne Backelandt and Christel Klootwijk for their help with recruiting participants and data collection and Sander Thomaes for providing helpful feedback on an earlier version of this article. I am also grateful to all children and parents that participated in this research and NEMO Science Live for the opportunity to collect data. This work was supported by a VENI NWO grant (VI.Veni.191 G.052) awarded to J.S.
Keywords
- Ability
- Age
- Implicit theories
- Math achievement
- Motivational frameworks
- Prosocial behavior
- Social-dominance
- Stability
- Stereotype content
- Young