Interesting study Billy.  

Thanks.  Chris

 

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, October 12, 2014 12:35 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] 5 year olds -the rise of critical thinking skills

 

 

 

 

 

 

Concordia News


Trying to fool a kindergartener? 


Not so fast


Concordia-UBC research reveals that children as young as five can gauge when 
adults are overconfident

 

Posted on October 8, 2014

|

By: Cléa Desjardins 

 

>From how to tie a shoelace to learning the words for colours, kids have lots 
>to learn — and for the most part, they depend on others to teach it to them.

But whether deliberately or inadvertently, people sometimes misinform. So at 
what age can kids tell trustworthy teachers from confidence tricksters?

A new study published in PLOS One by psychology researchers from Concordia and 
the University of British Columbia shows that by the age of five, children 
become wary of information provided by people who make overly-confident claims.

For the study, Patricia Brosseau-Liard, who is now a Concordia postdoctoral 
fellow, recruited 96 four- and five-year-olds. She and her UBC Department of 
Psychology co-authors Tracy Cassels and Susan Birch had the youngsters weigh 
two important cues to a person’s credibility — prior accuracy and confidence — 
when deciding what to believe.

The researchers showed their subjects short videos of two adults talking about 
familiar animals. The speakers would either:

A.      Make true statements about the animal in a hesitant voice
“Hmm, I guess whales live in the water?”
B.      Make false statements about the animal in a confident voice
“Oh, I know! Whales live in the ground!”


The kids were then shown videos of the same two adults speaking about strange 
animals. The previously confident speaker would state facts with confidence, 
and the previously hesitant speaker remained hesitant while stating different 
facts. The participants were then asked whom they believed.

In children closer to the age of four, it was a 50/50 split: they were as 
likely to believe the confident liar as the hesitant truth-teller. But as they 
neared the age of five, participants were more likely to believe the previously 
accurate but hesitant individual, suggesting a year can make a big difference 
in terms of a child’s evolution in the critical consumption of information. 

As Brosseau-Liard explains, these findings are important for teachers and 
caregivers.

“Our study gives us a window into children’s developing social cognition, 
skepticism and critical thinking. It shows us that, even though kindergarteners 
have a reputation for being gullible, they are actually pretty good at 
evaluating sources of information. Parents can use this ability to help guide 
them in their learning.” 

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  • [RC] 5 ... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • RE... Chris Hahn

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