Preschool Children's Evolving Conceptions of Badness: A Longitudinal Study
Title:
Preschool Children's Evolving Conceptions of Badness: A Longitudinal Study
Author:
Tisak, Marie S. Block, Jeanne H.
Appeared in:
Early education and development
Paging:
Volume 1 (1990) nr. 4 pages 300-307
Year:
1990-04-01
Contents:
The purpose of this research was to investigate longitudinally preschool children's conceptions of badness. Forty children from the Block and Block study of personality and cognitive development were interviewed at ages 3, 4, and 5 years. When asked to generate things children do that are "bad," preschoolers predominately generated events entailing negative consequences to others, that is, moral transgressions. They also mentioned events pertaining to conventional violations, emotional expressions, prudential situations, and punishments, but these were comparatively rare. The moral transgressions generated involved physical harm, property violations, and inter- personal trust violations. Physical harm was referred to significantly more often than the latter two moral categories. These findings were stable across the preschool years.