Authors
Jellie Sierksma, Tessa AM Lansu, Johan C Karremans, Gijsbert Bijlstra
Publication date
2018/5
Journal
Developmental Psychology
Volume
54
Issue
5
Pages
916
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Two studies examined when and why children (10–13 years) help ethnic in-group and out-group peers. In Study 1 (n= 163) children could help an out-group or in-group peer with a word-guessing game by entering codes into a computer. While children evaluated the out-group more negatively than the in-group, they helped out-group peers more than in-group peers. Study 2 (n= 117) conceptually replicated the findings of Study 1. Additionally the results suggest that when children endorsed the stereotype that the out-group is “less smart,” this increased their intention to help out-group peers and it decreased their intention to enter codes for in-group peers. The results suggest that the specific content of a negative stereotype can guide helping responses toward out-group and in-group members.(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)
Total citations
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