Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, School of Sociology and Psychology, Central University of Finance and Economics, Beijing 100081, China
2. School of Labor Economics, Capital University of Economics and Business, Beijing 100070, China
Abstract
This study investigates the bidirectional associations between gender egalitarianism and prosocial behavior in adolescents, and the moderating effect of gender in the associations, as well as gender differences and longitudinal changes in both. We recruited 543 Chinese adolescents (284 girls, 259 boys; mean age at Time 1 = 11.27 years) and collected three waves of data measuring gender egalitarianism and prosocial behavior at one-year intervals. According to the results, girls expressed greater gender egalitarianism than boys did; girls reported more prosocial behavior than boys in the sixth grade, but there were no significant gender differences in the seventh and eighth grades. Adolescents’ gender egalitarianism stayed stable from the sixth to the seventh grade then increased from the seventh to the eighth grade, and there was a decrease in prosocial behavior from the sixth to the seventh grade. More importantly, the results of the multi-group cross-lagged panel model revealed that adolescents’ gender egalitarianism in the previous year positively predicted prosocial behavior in the next year, and vice versa; such bidirectional associations equally applied to boys and girls. These findings add to the knowledge of adolescent gender egalitarianism and prosocial behavior, and the dynamic interplay between the two.
Funder
2017 Beijing Social Science Fund
Reference70 articles.
1. Bear, G.G., and Minke, K.M. (2006). Prosocial Behavior, National Association of School Psychologists.
2. Refining the theory of basic individual values;Schwartz;J. Pers. Soc. Psychol.,2012
3. Prosocial development in adolescence;Crone;Curr. Opin. Psychol.,2022
4. Motivating prosocial behavior by leveraging positive self-regard through values affirmation;Schneider;J. Appl. Soc. Psychol.,2022
5. Fu, X., Lv, Y., Yang, Z., Yu, X., and Wang, R. (2018). Chinese adolescents’ power distance value and prosocial behavior toward powerful people: A longitudinal study. PLoS ONE, 13.