Developmental Changes in the Contribution of Shared Experience to Social Role-Taking Competence
- 1 June 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Behavioral Development
- Vol. 7 (2) , 145-156
- https://doi.org/10.1177/016502548400700203
Abstract
The contribution of shared experience to the social role-taking competence of 120 preschool, second- and fifth-grade children was evaluated under experimental conditions which did or did not provide subjects the opportunity to previously occupy the perspective of those whose points of view they were later required to assume. It was demonstrated that the youngest subjects regularly failed in their role-taking efforts with or without such backgrounds of shared experience, that the 11-year-olds succeeded in either case, and that the success of the 7-year-olds was a direct function of whether or not they shared common background experiences with those whose roles they attempted to assume. These results indicate that social role-taking competence in early and middle childhood is a joint function of both cognitive ability level and the actual degree of overlap which exists between the experiences of subjects and their role-taking partners.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of role-taking experiences on role taking, empathy, altruism, and aggression.Developmental Psychology, 1978
- Perspective-taking skills in young children: Seeing the world through rose-colored glasses.Developmental Psychology, 1978
- Perspective Ability: The Conditions of ChangeChild Development, 1977
- Perceptual, cognitive, and affective perspective taking in kindergarten through sixth-grade children.Developmental Psychology, 1975
- Female preschoolers' perceptions of affective responses and interpersonal behavior in videotaped episodes.Developmental Psychology, 1974
- Ersatz egocentrism: A reply to H. Borke.Developmental Psychology, 1972