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What determines the focus of a researcher's interest, the sources
of inspiration for a study, or the variables scrutinized? If we
were to examine the antecedents of these decisions, they would
surely emerge as accidents of circumstance--the personal
experiences of the researcher, the inspiration of early mentors,
the influence of contemporary colleagues--all tempered by the
intellectual currents that nurture the researcher's hypotheses.
Among the accidents that mold the careers of researchers is
geographic location. The culture in which a research program
emerges helps determine both its very subject and its method. The
primary purpose of this book is to assist those interested in the
scientific study of children's social competence in transcending
the boundaries imposed both by geography and by selective exposure
to the highly diverse schools of thought that have led to interest
in this field. Most of these ideas were presented and exchanged at
an Advanced Study Institute entitled "Social Competence in
Developmental Perspective" held in Savoie, France, in July 1988.
This Institute was attended by scholars from France, England,
Northern Ireland, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Portugal,
Netherlands, Canada, the United States and Brazil. Those who
participated will recognize that the metamorphosis from lecture to
chapter has necessitated many changes. In order to accommodate the
reader who may be unfamiliar with the field, more attention has
been paid here to identifying the theoretical contexts of the
research described.
Willard W. Hartup This volume amounts to an anniversary collection:
It was 50 years ago that Lois Jack (1934) published the findings
from what most investigators consider to be the first intervention
study in this area. The experiment (later replicated and extended
by Marjorie Page, 1936, and Gertrude Chittenden, 1942) concerned
ascendant behavior in preschool children, which was defined to
include: (a) The pursuit of one's own purposes against interference
and (b) directing the behavior of others. Individual differences in
ascendance were assumed to have some stability across time and,
hence, to be important in personality development. But ascendance
variations were also viewed as a function of the immediate
situation. Among the conditions assumed to determine ascendance
were "the individual's status in the group as expressed in others'
attitudes toward him, his conception of these attitudes, and his
previously formed social habits" (Jack, 1934, p. 10). Dr. Jack's
main interest was to show that nonascendant children, identified on
the basis of observations in the laboratory with another child,
were different from their more ascendant companions in one
important respect: They lacked self confidence. And, having
demonstrated that, Dr. Jack devised a procedure for teaching the
knowledge and skill to nonascendant children that the play
materials required. She guessed, correctly, that this training
would bring about an increase in the ascendance scores of these
children."
What determines the focus of a researcher's interest, the sources
of inspiration for a study, or the variables scrutinized? If we
were to examine the antecedents of these decisions, they would
surely emerge as accidents of circumstance--the personal
experiences of the researcher, the inspiration of early mentors,
the influence of contemporary colleagues--all tempered by the
intellectual currents that nurture the researcher's hypotheses.
Among the accidents that mold the careers of researchers is
geographic location. The culture in which a research program
emerges helps determine both its very subject and its method. The
primary purpose of this book is to assist those interested in the
scientific study of children's social competence in transcending
the boundaries imposed both by geography and by selective exposure
to the highly diverse schools of thought that have led to interest
in this field. Most of these ideas were presented and exchanged at
an Advanced Study Institute entitled "Social Competence in
Developmental Perspective" held in Savoie, France, in July 1988.
This Institute was attended by scholars from France, England,
Northern Ireland, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Portugal,
Netherlands, Canada, the United States and Brazil. Those who
participated will recognize that the metamorphosis from lecture to
chapter has necessitated many changes. In order to accommodate the
reader who may be unfamiliar with the field, more attention has
been paid here to identifying the theoretical contexts of the
research described.
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