Youngsters learn strategic negotiating skills from one another and their carers as they acquire a sense of moral awareness, a key University of Birmingham and Canterbury Christ Church University study into child development has found.
Early childhood years lay the groundwork for character development, as families, early educational professionals and peers play a vital role in shaping children’s moral awareness, said Professor James Arthur, of the University of Birmingham’s School of Education.- Social Sciences - 12:00 Workers’ strikes and Facebook likes
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Families and professional carers are central to a child’s character development
- were kind and considerate.
- were capable of taking control, or trying to dominate when co-operating.
- usually manifested honesty and fairness in the way they treated others.
- frequently used humour in ways which transformed situations.
- used several approaches when wanting to control things and get their own way, including hurtful words, strategic deception and, on occasion, manipulation.
From the parents’ and professionals’ points of view, researchers found that:
Commenting on their child’s characteristics, parents most commonly said that their children were happy, caring, curious, kind, funny, helpful, and polite.
Practitioners agreed with parents’ comments on children’s characteristics but were more likely also to say the children were responsible.
Parents wanted their children as adults to be happy, caring, honest, kind, respectful, responsible, confident, well-educated and hard-working.
“The evidence suggests that exploration and testing are elements in their moral maturation,” says Professor Arthur.
“The theme of ‘sharing’ holds together many of the observed behaviours because it points to ways in which children are trying to come to terms with themselves and their needs in relation to others. “Parents and carers have much to work with, as by example and through questioning, they assist the children in their care to give voice to their values.“It is interesting that practitioners thought the main purpose of early childhood education was ‘to allow children to meet other children’ and ‘to help children to become more independent.’ Both parents and carers agreed that the primary influence on a child’s values came from parents and siblings.”
Lord Watson, who will launch the report, said: “It is commonly assumed that the influences on the early years of a child’s life are determinative for the future individual: the evidence in this report suggests that the situation is more complex.“It is true that the home and the professional environment are of the utmost importance, but children themselves take initiatives and explore their own experience through story and play which inform their growing self-awareness, knowledge of other people and sense of responsibility.
“As with other areas of education, early intervention and positive example seem to be crucial ingredients in developing a child’s values. Nothing is more important for the future well-being of our society than this dimension of education.”
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