236Sanders ACEI

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SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND THE FORMATION OF COMPASSION WITH INTERACTIVE DEVELOPMENTAL PROCESSES ACEI Global Summit on Childhood: Exploring the experience of childhood worldwide Wendy Hinrichs Sanders, Ph.D.

13 April, 2014

A COUPLE OF KEY THEORIES OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY: DEVELOPMENTAL SYSTEMS THEORY

Development is Bi-directional, Contextual, Situational Processes, Goals and Contexts, Biology, Culture, History, Plasticity RICHARD LERNER

CULTURAL PSYCHOLOGY: THEORY OF MIND • The

child creates a theory of the other's goal and how to meet it

• Tomasello

and Warneken

Felix Warneken and Tomasello

SPIRITUAL FORMATION • Tranformative

nature of direct experience with the nearness

of God • Intrinsic

human capacity for self-transcendence

• Relational

consciousness. -Hay and Nye

• In

which the self is embedded in something greater than the self, including the sacred. It is the developmental engine that propels the search for connectedness, meaning, purpose and contribution Benson 2006:485

SPIRITUAL PSYCHOLOGY • Reciprocating

Relationships

• Awe/Wonder/Transcendence/

Connectedness

• Fidelity • Prosocial

behavior

COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE

al i on ot ght Em hou T

Emotion

Thought

Mary Immordino-Yang Antonio Damasio

COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE

Emotional Thought

Mary Immordino-Yang Antonio Damasio

CHILD FOCUS GROUP RESEARCH • 36

children, 6-12 years, selected by children's pastors as compassionate, separate gender groups, 1 hour, one church in each of 3 states; some interviews

• Parents

of children, some interviews

• Teachers

of children

UNDERSTANDING COMPASSION • Sourced

in love

• Justice • Righteousness/holiness • Forgiveness • Hope • (Sacrifice) • Collective

power for vulnerable

UNDERSTANDING COMPASSION • Recognize • Physical

and respond to

• Social/Psychological • Spiritual

Pain

Pain

PERSONAL SURPRISES

• Child

Capacity

• Observation • Cognitive • Know

Skills---intentionality and memory

problem-solving

how to learn

INTERACTIVE PROCESSES Observing Recognizing Receiving

Rehearsing

Responding

RECEIVING n = 68 acts

Social Psychological 19%

Spiritual Pain 18%

Peers Parents Other Adults Spiritual Referents Others 0

Physical 62%

12.5

25

70

Home Church Playground School Community SpiritualmRealm

52.5 35 17.5 0

17.5

35

52.5

70

0

HelpingComfortingGiving

37.5

50

OBSERVING n = 29 acts Spiritual Peers Parents Other Adults Ancillary

Physical 31% Spiritual 48%

0

Social/Psychological 21%

7

14

Giving 28%

Home Church Playground School Community World 0

10

20

30

40

Comforting 38%

21

Helping 35%

28

OBSERVING EXEMPLARS • Authentic, Consistent, Persevering • Just • Integrity • Holiness • Hope

RECOGNIZING

Emotion

Sensory Data

Sad Despair Frustration Indignation

Cognitive Processing

RESPONDING n =71

help

give

comfort

pray

ECOLOGICAL REACH Family

Church/School

22%

Community

10%

14% 54%

World

REHEARSING

Emotion

Sensory Data

Sad Despair Frustration Indignation

Joy Integrity Satisfaction Hope SelfPerpetuating

Cognitive Processing

CHILDREN AS THE HOPE FOR A MORE COMPASSIONATE WORLD • Maria

Montessori recognized children's capacity as the hope of the world

• Emmanuel

Levinas recognized the importance of face to face to engender compassion

• Technological

childhood brings us to the precipice of face to face global interactions

THEIR STORIES • Wisconsin

girl sold candy bars to free child slaves

• Kansas

child befriended a recent immigrant who had been shunned

• Ugandan

children eat 5 to a plate to share a meager meal

HOW DO WE ENGENDER GLOBAL PEACEBUILDING AS WE WALK ALONGSIDE CHILDREN? How do children inspire and enable us to teach compassion to a competition-weary world?

We Ask Them