服务学习的反规范效应:通过接触和自主培养对社会平等的态度。

Margaret A. Brown, J. Wymer, Cierra S. Cooper
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引用次数: 7

摘要

权力动力学与群体间亲社会行为有关(Nadler & Halabi, 2015)。本研究探讨了影响群体间亲社会行为对社会平等观影响的两个因素:群体间直接接触的数量和帮助类型。社会心理学课程的学生(N = 93)被随机分配到服务学习组或对照组。服务学习组进一步细分为自主导向帮扶组和依赖导向帮扶组。在9周的时间里参与了大约19个小时的社区服务后,服务学习者对社会平等的看法比对照组更为积极。这种影响在自主导向的帮助者中最为明显,他们有高度的直接小组间联系。本文讨论了服务学习作为一种反规范群体间亲社会行为的影响和机制。亲社会行为是人类功能中不可或缺的适应性组成部分。亲社会行为可以有多种形式,包括紧急情况下自发提供的援助,持续的社区服务,以及每年数十亿美元的慈善捐款。社区从亲社会人士的时间、资源和才能中受益匪浅。亲社会行为也有利于帮助者。亲社会的人变得更快乐,更健康,并通过为他人服务体验到更大的生活目标感(Piliavin, 2003;史密斯和戴维森,2014)。“群体间”的亲社会行为(即发生在不同社会群体之间)具有增加人们接触不同群体成员的潜在好处,并可能导致对社会平等的偏好增加。Brown (2011a, 2011b)发现,参与服务学习这种群体间亲社会行为(IPB)会降低社会支配倾向(Pratto, Sidanius, Stall worth, & Malle, 1994)。社会支配取向是一种反平等主义的态度,包括一个人对基于群体的社会等级的偏好和对低地位群体的歧视的支持(Sidanius & Pratto, 1999)。群体间亲社会行为最有可能产生这些好处的条件尚未得到探索。本研究考察了假设影响IPB与对社会平等态度之间关系的两个变量:群体之间直接个人接触的数量和提供援助的类型。我们首先简要回顾文献,为本研究的设计和假设提供理论背景,重点关注IPB与权力之间的亲密关系。权力动力学常与IPB有关。提供帮助的群体(即“帮助者”)可能拥有其他群体(即“接受者”)所缺乏的一些资源,因此交易是建立在地位差异上的。群体间帮助作为地位关系模型(IHSR)纳德勒,2002;Nadler & Halabi, 2006)是社会心理学中最成熟的理论,描述了IPB和权力动力学之间的联系。该模型基于一个假设,即普遍存在的社会不平等合法化(Costa-Lopes, Dovidio, Pereira, & Jost, 2013)在IPB中运作,这样亲社会行为就不会促进平等,而是经常起到讽刺作用,使高地位群体和低地位群体保持在各自的位置上(Cunningham & Platow, 2007;Halabi, Dovidio, & Nadler, 2008;Jackson & ess, 2000;Nadler & Chernyak-Hai, 2014)。IHSR区分了两种类型的亲社会行为:自主导向和依赖导向。自主导向的帮助旨在通过提供部分解决方案(如可用于解决问题或需求的工具)来帮助接受者帮助自己。相反,面向依赖的帮助为接受者的需求提供了一个完整的解决方案。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Counter-Normative Effects of Service-Learning: Fostering Attitudes toward Social Equality through Contact and Autonomy.
Power dynamics are implicated in intergroup prosocial behavior (Nadler & Halabi, 2015). This research investigated two factors that influence the effect of intergroup prosocial behavior on views of social equality: amount of direct intergroup contact and type of helping. Students in a social psychology course (N = 93) were randomly assigned to a service-learning group or to a control group. The service-learning group was further subdivided into an autonomy-oriented helping group or a dependency-oriented helping group. After participating in approximately 19 hours of community service over nine weeks, service-learners had more positive views of social equality compared to the control group. This effect was strongest in autonomy-oriented helpers who had high levels of direct intergroup contact. The implications and mechanisms of service-learning as a form of counter-normative intergroup prosocial behavior are discussed. Prosocial behavior is an integral, adaptive component of human functioning. Prosocial behavior can take many forms, including spontaneous assistance offered in emergencies, sustained community service, and the billions of dollars given each year in philanthropy. Communities richly benefit from the time, resources, and talents of prosocial people. Prosocial behavior also benefits helpers. Prosocial people become happier, healthier, and experience a greater sense of purpose in life through their service to others (Piliavin, 2003; Smith & Davidson, 2014). Prosocial behavior that is "intergroup" (i.e., that occurs across different social groups) has the added potential benefit of increasing people's exposure to diverse group members and may result in an increased preference for social equality. Brown (2011a, 2011b) found that participating in service-learning, a form of intergroup prosocial behavior (IPB), reduced social dominance orientation (Pratto, Sidanius, Stall worth, & Malle, 1994). Social dominance orientation is an anti-egalitarian attitude that includes one's preference for group-based social hierarchy and support for discrimination against lower status groups (Sidanius & Pratto, 1999). The conditions under which these benefits of intergroup prosocial behavior are most likely to accrue have not yet been explored. The present study examines two variables hypothesized to influence the relationship between IPB and attitudes toward social equality: the amount of direct, personal contact that groups have with one another and the type of assistance offered. We begin with a brief review of the literature to provide the theoretical context for this study's design and hypotheses, focusing on the intimate relationship between IPB and power. Power dynamics are frequently implicated in IPB. The group offering assistance (i.e., the "helpers") may possess some resource that the other group (i.e., the "recipients") lacks, and thus the transaction is founded on a status differential. The Intergroup Helping as Status Relations Model (IHSR; Nadler, 2002; Nadler & Halabi, 2006) is the most well-developed theory in social psychology to describe the connection between IPB and power dynamics. The model is based on the assumption that pervasive legitimation of social inequality (Costa-Lopes, Dovidio, Pereira, & Jost, 2013) operates within IPB, such that rather than promote equality, prosocial behavior frequently serves the ironic function of keeping high status and low status groups in their respective places (Cunningham & Platow, 2007; Halabi, Dovidio, & Nadler, 2008; Jackson & Esses, 2000; Nadler & Chernyak-Hai, 2014). The IHSR differentiates between two types of prosocial behavior: autonomy-oriented and dependency-oriented. Autonomy-oriented helping is aimed at assisting the recipient to help him or herself by providing a partial solution such as tools that can be used to resolve the issue or need. In contrast, dependency-oriented helping provides a full solution to the recipient's need. …
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