The immediate and delayed effects of group activities on Chinese college students’ empathy: a longitudinal tracking study
Chuang Xu, Wenting Gong, Jian-Hong Ye, Fangyu Fu

TL;DR
This study shows that group activities can boost empathy in Chinese college students, but the effect fades over time and needs ongoing support.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical evidence on the immediate and delayed effects of group activities on empathy in college students.
Findings
Group activities significantly increased empathy levels among college students.
The effect of group activities on empathy diminished over time but remained relatively high for a period.
Ongoing attention and support are needed to sustain empathy development.
Abstract
Although the role of empathy in reducing campus bullying has been receiving increasing attention, empirical research on the development of empathy and its delayed effects among college students is lacking. To examine the immediate and delayed effects of group activities on increases in empathy among college students, this study randomly assigned 90 first-year students from a Chinese university into control, intervention, and delayed intervention groups. The groups with interventions participated in multiple sessions of counselling activities, and the Interpersonal Reactivity Index-C scale was used as a pre-test, post-test, and re-test measure to assess empathy levels in each group. Additionally, interview transcripts were employed to verify the effectiveness of the study. The results showed that group activities were significantly effective in enhancing the level of empathy among…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBullying, Victimization, and Aggression · Youth Development and Social Support · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
