Children's evaluation of verified and unverified claims

被引:19
|
作者
Butler, Lucas Payne [1 ]
Schmidt, Marco F. H. [2 ,3 ]
Tavassolie, Nadia S. [1 ]
Gibbs, Hailey M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Dept Human Dev & Quantitat Methodol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[2] Ludwig Maximillians Univ, Int Res Grp Dev Origins Human Normat, D-80539 Munich, Germany
[3] Univ Bremen, Dept Dev & Educ Psychol, D-28359 Bremen, Germany
关键词
Social cognition; Social learning; Epistemic cognition; Epistemic vigilance; Selective trust; Normative evaluation; YOUNG-CHILDREN; PEDAGOGICAL CUES; TRUST; INFORMANTS; KNOWLEDGE; SCIENCE; OTHERS; LEARN; INFER;
D O I
10.1016/j.jecp.2018.07.007
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Critical to children's learning is the ability to judiciously select what information to accept-to use as the basis for learning and inference-and what information to reject. This becomes especially difficult in a world increasingly inundated with information, where children must carefully reason about the process by which claims are made in order to acquire accurate knowledge. In two experiments, we investigated whether 3- to 7-year-old children (N = 120) understand that factual claims based on verified evidence are more acceptable than claims that have not been sufficiently verified. We found that even at preschool age, children evaluated verified claims as more acceptable 'than insufficiently verified claims, and that the extent to which they did so was related to their explicit understanding, as evident in their explanations of why those claims were more or less acceptable. These experiments lay the groundwork for an important line of research studying the roots and development of this foundational critical thinking skill. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:73 / 83
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Who do I believe? Children's epistemic trust in internet, teacher, and peer informants
    Wang, Fuxing
    Tong, Yu
    Danovitch, Judith
    COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 50 : 248 - 260
  • [32] Why should I trust you? Investigating young children's spontaneous mistrust in potential deceivers
    Stengelin, Roman
    Grueneisen, Sebastian
    Tomasello, Michael
    COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, 2018, 48 : 146 - 154
  • [33] Children's selective information sharing based on the recipient's role
    Danovitch, Judith H.
    JOURNAL OF GENETIC PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 181 (2-3) : 68 - 77
  • [34] Interpersonal trust in children's testimonial learning
    Koenig, Melissa A.
    Li, Pearl Han
    McMyler, Benjamin
    MIND & LANGUAGE, 2022, 37 (05) : 955 - 974
  • [35] Children's developing capacity to calibrate the verbal testimony of others with observed evidence when inferring causal relations
    McLoughlin, Niamh
    Finiasz, Zoe
    Sobel, David M.
    Corriveau, Kathleen H.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 210
  • [36] Is secondhand information better read or said? Factors influencing children?s endorsements of text-based information
    Chandler-Campbell, Ian L.
    Ghossainy, Maliki E.
    Mills, Candice M.
    Corriveau, Kathleen H.
    COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, 2022, 63
  • [37] Children's Belief in Counterintuitive and Counterperceptual Messages
    Lane, Jonathan D.
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES, 2018, 12 (04) : 247 - 252
  • [38] The relationships between teachers' evaluation of children's academic readiness and children's later outcomes
    Kim, Jiye
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CHILD CARE AND EDUCATION POLICY, 2024, 18 (01):
  • [39] Young Children's Trust in Overtly Misleading Advice
    Heyman, Gail D.
    Sritanyaratana, Lalida
    Vanderbilt, Kimberly E.
    COGNITIVE SCIENCE, 2013, 37 (04) : 646 - 667
  • [40] Children's Trust in and Learning From Voice Assistants
    Girouard-Hallam, Lauren N.
    Danovitch, Judith H.
    DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 58 (04) : 646 - 661