Chinese Singaporean Children's Expectations About Peer Group Norms in the Context of Wealth and Ethnicity
Alexandra Paquette, Leher Singh, Marley B. Forbes, Melanie Killen

TL;DR
The study explores how young Chinese Singaporean children expect peer groups to include new members based on wealth and ethnicity, revealing age-related shifts in their reasoning.
Contribution
The study reveals novel insights into children's nuanced expectations of peer group norms related to wealth and ethnicity.
Findings
Children expected peer groups to prioritize high-wealth peers over shared ethnicity when both traits were presented.
Older children increasingly predicted low-wealth groups would include peers of the same wealth.
Moral reasoning was evident when predicting low-wealth Chinese groups' inclusion of high-wealth peers for resource-sharing.
Abstract
United Nations SDG 10 focuses on reducing inequalities in civil society. To address the emergence of attitudes and reasoning about social exclusion based on wealth and ethnicity, Chinese Singaporean children's predictions about peer group inclusion decisions based on ethnicity (Chinese/Indian) and wealth (high/low) were investigated. A cohort of 103 participants (4–7 years, M age = 5.79; 49% female) was asked to predict and reason about how a peer group would make choices about including a new peer over three conditions. In the Ethnicity condition, participants expected peers to give priority to same‐ethnicity friendships; this expectation increased with age. In the Wealth condition, participants’ expectations for peers to give priority to same‐wealth friendships increased with age. When both ethnicity and wealth were independently manipulated, participants expected their peers to give…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Animal Learning Development · Bullying, Victimization, and Aggression · Ethics and Legal Issues in Pediatric Healthcare
