Kids and Random Acts of Kindness
People who know me well, know that my reading habits are
erratic - I read all over the
place too often without any clear focus.
I’m sure I “see things” that aren’t there, but I can’t help myself from
seeing connections. Here’s an
example.
Yesterday, December 30th, 2012, I read this
article on NPR’s Most E-Mailed Stories:
Random Acts Of Kindness Can
Make Kids More Popular
by NANCY SHUTE
December 27, 201210:39
AM
Enlarge
image
A hug is good for Mom,
and good for her daughter.
iStockphoto.com
In the aftermath of
Christmas, a parent could be forgiven for thinking that materialism has trumped
human kindness.
Take heart. Children
can easily become kinder and more helpful. And that behavior makes them more
positive, more accepting and more popular.
At least that's how it
worked for fourth- and fifth-graders in Vancouver, Canada. Researchers there
have been studying empathy and altruism in schoolchildren for decades.
"How do we decrease
bullying, increase empathy and caring for others?" says Kimberly
Schonert-Reichl, an applied
developmental psychologist at the University of British Columbia who helped
lead the experiment.
They wanted to see how
performing random acts of kindness would influence that. But one measurement
thrown into the mix almost as an afterthought — being liked by peers — was the
quality most improved by helpful acts.
The researchers asked
9- to 11-year-olds in 19 classrooms to either perform three acts of kindness or
visit three places each week (the tourists were the control group).
The acts of kindness
were simple. The children gave mom a hug when she was stressed out, shared
their lunches, or vacuumed the floor.
After four weeks, the
researchers tested the kids and compared the results with tests they'd taken
before. All the children had more positive emotions, and were slightly happier.
But the children who
performed acts of kindness were much more likely to be accepting of their
peers, naming more classmates as children they'd like to spend time with.
"I do think we're
on to something," Schonert-Reichl tells Shots. The children were at an age
when bullying can be more extreme, she says, and children become more
self-conscious. So an increase in peer acceptance could benefit in the
classroom and in social life. The study was published online in the journal PLOS One.
Being part of the
experiment made kindness intentional. The children had to plan their acts of
kindness, and remember to do them. Similar experiments in adults have shown
that being actively kind increases happiness, and happier people then become
more likely to help others.
Parents don't have to
have a Ph.D. to encourage these sorts of simple acts of kindness in children –
or in themselves.
"I think of ways
to start the New Year, and people making resolutions," says
Schonert-Reichl, a former middle school teacher and mother of two boys."
Can I do an act of kindness for someone every day?"
Harried parents would feel
better, she says, and their children would, too. "They start helping, and
they start feeling this is nice." Seeing themselves as the kind of person
who helps others could be an identity that then stays with them for the rest of
their lives.
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