Children's perceptions of effort and productivity as granting a right for reward

M. Nisan
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

The general hypothesis of this study is that reward allocation by schoolchildren is founded on the perception of right, and that both effort alone and productivity alone are perceived as sufficient conditions for granting a right to an equal share of rewards. One hundred and twenty children and adolescents, equally divided between the sexes, three age groups (6–7, 10–11, and 15–16) and two environments (urban and kibbutz) were individually interviewed. They were presented with scenarios of two children working at a task, each investing a different amount of effort and/or reaching a different level of production. The resulting reward allocations proposed by the subjects, as well as the reasons they gave for them, support the general hypothesis stated above. Only the sufficiency principle, based on right, fits the allocation of rewards across variations of invested effort and productivity. A few differences were noted between age groups, whereas quite a consistent pattern was revealed for both genders and both environments. An explanation of allocation in terms of right is shown to be more appropriate than one in terms of equality.
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孩子们把努力和生产力看作是获得奖励的权利
本研究的一般假设是,小学生的奖励分配是建立在权利观念的基础上的,仅仅是努力和生产力都被认为是授予平等分享奖励权利的充分条件。120名儿童和青少年,按性别平均划分,分为三个年龄组(6-7岁、10-11岁和15-16岁)和两个环境(城市和基布兹)。研究人员向他们展示了两个孩子完成一项任务的场景,每个孩子投入不同的努力和/或达到不同的生产水平。受试者提出的奖励分配结果,以及他们给出的理由,都支持了上述的一般假设。只有以权利为基础的充分性原则,才适合在不同的投入努力和生产率之间分配奖励。在不同的年龄组之间发现了一些差异,而在两性和两种环境中都发现了相当一致的模式。从权利的角度来解释分配,比从平等的角度来解释分配更为恰当。
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