How, when and why abilities go social: researching children’s empathy and prosocial behaviors in context

Author:

Roerig Simone,van Wesel Floryt,Evers Sandra J. T. M.,van der Meulen Anna,Krabbendam Lydia

Abstract

IntroductionThe current paper undertakes interdisciplinary research on empathy in children by combining insights and methodological tools from the fields of psychology, education and anthropology. The researchers aim to map how children’s individual empathic abilities studied on a cognitive level do or do not coincide with their empathic expressions as part of group dynamics in daily life at the classroom level.MethodWe combined qualitative and quantitative methods within three different classrooms at three different schools. In total, 77 children aged between 9 to 12 years participated.ResultsThe results indicate how such an interdisciplinary approach can provide unique insights. Through the integration of data from our different research tools we could reveal the interplay between different levels. More specifically this meant showing the possible influence of rule-based prosocial behaviors versus empathy based prosocial behaviors, the interplay between community empathic abilities and individual empathic abilities, and the role of peer culture and school culture.DiscussionThese insights can be seen as encouragement toward a research approach that extends beyond the single disciplinary field in social science research.

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

General Psychology

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