The study is the first of its kind, analysing the behaviour of over 300 children from societies in Africa, Asia, Europe, and South America.
From how we say ‘hello’ to the side of the road we drive
on, all societies have norms – or ‘rules’ –
that shape people’s everyday lives.
Now a new study – the first of its kind – has shown that
children worldwide will challenge peers if they break the ‘rules’, but how they
challenge them varies between cultures.
Led by the University of Plymouth, UK and Freie Universität
Berlin, Germany, the study analysed the behaviour of 376 children aged five to
eight from eight societies in Africa, Asia, Europe, and South America.
The children were
each taught to play a block sorting game – with half taught to sort the blocks
by colour, and half taught to sort them by shape. They were then put into
pairs, with one playing the game and the other observing.
The research showed
that observers intervened more often when the other child appeared to play by
the wrong set of rules. The more a child intervened, the more likely their
partner was to change their behaviour.
The study also showed that the type of
intervention varied – with children from rural areas using imperative verbal
protest more than children from urban areas.
The study is the first to analyse children’s behaviour in challenging norm violations across cultures worldwide, and adds to our understanding of how norms allow people to achieve coordination and cooperation.
Lead author Dr Patricia Kanngiesser from the University of Plymouth said:
“What is new about this study is that we observed children’s behaviours and travelled worldwide to do so – we didn’t ask children what they intended to do, but measured what they actually did in real-life social interactions.
“It was also really interesting to see that how the children corrected each other varied by location. To our surprise, children from rural small-scale communities protested as much or even more than children from urban settings. We assumed that, because everyone knows everyone else in small scale communities, direct interventions would be less common, as people could rely on more indirect ways such as reputation to ensure compliance with rules. But we actually found the opposite to be true.
“The next step is to explore further what motivates children to intervene and how they learn to intervene. For example, do they learn from adults or older children around them how to react to rule breaking?”
The full study, entitled Children across societies enforce conventional norms but in culturally variable ways is available to view in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences from Friday 31 December 2021 (doi: 10.1073/pnas.2112521119).
The study was co-authored by:
- Dr Marie Schäfer, University of Leipzig, Germany
- Dr Esther Herrmann, University of Portsmouth, UK
- Dr Henriette Zeidler, Aston University, Birmingham, UK
- Professor Daniel Haun, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany
- Professor Michael Tomasello, Duke University, Durham, USA
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