Title: Chinese Psychological Aspects
1Chinese Psychological Aspects
2Outline
- I. Chinese Childhood Socialization
- II. Traditional Education for Chinese Boys
Girls - III. Emotion Among the Chinese
- IV. Contemporary Psychological Findings Chinese
vs. Western
3I. Chinese Childhood Socialization
- Psychologists focus on individuals, examine
individual capacities and variation in child
development . - Anthropologies pay more attention to cultural
environmental influences, e.g. socio-economic
condition of a population
4I. Chinese Childhood Socialization
- Childhood Socialization
- how parents rear their children
- how children learn to become acceptable members
of a society. - That is
- what is an acceptable Chinese way of socializing
children - what kind of adults Chinese socialization aims to
produce.
5I.1 The Confucian Tradition of Parental
Education??????
- Chinese concept of the child
- Scholars (Confucians) political authorities
developed over 2000 years - important roles for adult family-members in early
childhood education. - first essays (in 1st century B.C) by Confucian
scholars - Neo-Confucian???scholars in Song, Ming?
(1368-1644) Qing? (1644-1911)--- short essays
in plain language to guide parents in providing
their children with proper discipline e.g. the
Sanzijing ??? e.g. ???, ???,???,???).
6I.1 The Confucian Tradition of Parental Education
- Traditional Chinese
- a person by nature is not yet an acceptable/ full
human being - xue (deliberate efforts) to attain ren.
- Emphasis
- on paternal responsibility for instruction
- a childs responsibility for learning about the
way of becoming human (zuo ren ??).
7I.1.1 Environmental Theories of Child
Development fetus
- before birth and during gestation
- need for womb education
- When a woman becomes pregnant she is put into a
school of gestatony education, in order that
she may be able to impart to the child a proper
disposition before it is born. ?? - If she is affected by good things the child will
be good, if by bad things the child will be bad.
8I.1.1 Environmental Theories of Child
Development- fetus
- A pregnant woman wish to shape the character of
the coming child - restriction of her activities
- avoiding spicy or bitter food
- listening to good music
- Always smiling be peaceful
9I.1.1 Environmental Theories of Child Development
- After birth
- parents must provide the correct environment for
raising it. - A good mother seeks the best environment
- e.g. Mencius mother (mentioned in Lei Nu Zhuan
???, 77-6 B.C.)
10I.1.1 Environmental Theories of Child Development
- Confucians to be a full human
- must begin very early in the family
- to lay the foundation for the child
- to be one with proper manners and moral tenets.
- Ancient Chinese theories of child development
emphasize - formation of habits of correct behavior without a
trace of deliberate teaching or coercion.
11I.1.2 Models and Strategies of Traditional Child
Rearing
- Teaching by example ??
- was and still is an important principle.
- e.g. father/mother/ school-teacher the standard
of personal morality. - Parentsa childs first teachers
- Must of exemplary behavior to set a life-long
foundation for the child. - i.e. yi shen zuo ze ????
- Physical punishment??, normal effective
- Mencius passage
12I.1.3 Training of Affective Control
- Yanshi Jiaxun ,Yans Family Teaching ????(531-91
AD), 20 essays set a model for all - --train a child from infant to learn to
interpret adults facial expressions (the control
of affective display) and to act according to
parental wishes. - Our family has always emphasized strictness in
teaching children. When I was a young child at
home, we walked properly and took every step
delicately, spoke gently and calmly, showed great
reverence and fear in front of parents and
elders.
13I.1.3 Training of Affective Control
- Emphasis composed, reverential behavior the
restriction of physical activities among
children. - Text on family education
- Parents should teach their children no leaping,
arguing, joking, or using vulgar language. - How children should be taught to sit, stand,
walk, speak, bow, recite, and write. - The little ones are exhorted always to walk
slowly with the arms held under the sleeves, with
no waving of the arms or jumping. - Yans ideas vs. Nature of kids ???
14I.1.3 Training of Affective Control
- Aware of adults emotional states--to distinguish
pleasure from anger. - To educate a daughter-in-law, one must begin on
the first of marriage to educate a child, one
must begin with infancy. - i.e. bugou yanxiao???? (not to reveal ones
thoughts and feelings) - To sum up Chinese parents were pressured to
instill solemnity and self-control early on in
their children. - Why? social/community norm
15I.1.4 On Dongshi ??(understanding things)
- The age when a child is old enough to be punished
(capacity for moral reasoning right/wrong)
dongshi (understanding things) - When the son reaches the age of dongshi
(understanding/reason), the father must be
serious and proper in his speech and way of
living in order to teach his son. - Qn why son father ???
16I.1.4 On Dongshi (understanding things)
- Sima Guangs ???(AD1019-86) Jia fan?? (Family
Examples) - As soon as the child can eat by himself, he must
be taught to eat with his right hand. Family
discipline must begin as soon as the child can
talk and know things. By the age of six,
teaching of numbers and names of things must
begin. - Cheng brothers ????(11 century Confucian
scholars) said, People in ancient times
discipline children as soon as they can eat and
talk.
17I.1.4 On Dongshi (understanding things)
- Filial devotion?
- taught to toddlers as soon as they can walk/talk.
- pay daily respect to seniors to address them
properly. - The family regulations are such that as soon as
a child begins to understand, he is not only
taught to obey, but also loses his freedom of
action.
18I.1.4 On Dongshi (understanding things)
- Chinese theories of psychological development.
- E.g. Li Shiyi??? (AD1611-72)
- study at the age of 4 use the innate memory
capacity - At 15, to be pushed to study the classics (The
Four Books Five Texts????) for the national
examination??. - 4 Books Great learning??, Chongyong??, The
Analects??, Mencius?? - 5 Texts The Book of Poety/The Book of Songs, The
Book of Documents, The Book of Rites, The Book of
Change, The Book of Spring Autumn ?,?,?,?,??
19I.1.4 On Dongshi (understanding things)
- Lis theory
- Base on an Analects passage
- (Analects 2.4) Confucius says, At 15, I set my
heart on learning. At 30, I took my stand. At 40,
I was no longer in doubt. At 50, I know the
propensity of tian. At 60, I follow the my ears
were attuned. At 70, I followed the propensity of
tian without overstepping the line. - ????????,????,?????,??????,?????,??????????.
- Confucius presents his own stages.
- Not that everyones developmental stages is as
his
20I.2 Contemporary Chinese Conceptions of
Socialization
- Modern Chinese socialization
- for obedience
- for proper conduct
- for impulse-control
- for the acceptance of social obligations
- A relative lack of emphasis
- independence, assertiveness, and creativity
- extremely important for Western children
21How About Kids in Hong Kong ?
- British colony
- Over 97 are ethnic Chinese
- 2 written and 3 spoken languages
- What do you think Chinese identity, parental
control, independence????
22How About Kids in Hong Kong?
- Young Parents
- Western vs. Chinese influence ???
- Background Upbringing ???
- Education ???
- Cosmopolitan citizens ???
- Small family ???
- Good quality of life ???
23I.2 Contemporary Chinese Socialization Summary
- All Chinese, even modern, parents share certain
traditional values and practices. - To train children to develop a moral character,
- e.g. respect elders, cooperate maintain
harmonious social relations. - To help push children to achieve in school
(value educationxue) - Adults to be role models
- Young parents not harsh disciplinarians,
- Yet, to obey, to act on parents command.
24II. Traditional Education for Chinese Boys
Girls in the Past (till the end of the monarch)
- Education
- VERY expensive, only for better families
- Boys (at 6-8)
- study in the village school
- hire a live-in teacher??
- The Poor
- illiterate, help in the family since young,
inherit his fathers profession
25II.1 Traditional Education for Chinese Boys in
the Past (till the end of the monarch)
- Boys study/memorize text to prepare for the
public examination-- to bring glory (to family,
village, county) - Exam Content (since Tong)Ancient texts
(Confucian- Four Books Five Texts????) - Strategic issues
- Calligraphy
- Poetry writing since Tong to early Ming
- From late-Ming to Ching Dynasty
- exclude poetry strategic issues--not included
in the exam
26II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- Most girls illiterate, even from a rich family
- Females without ability are virtuous ???????
- Sewing, clothes-making, cooking, take care of the
family, kids-raising, how to serve a hushand
parents in-law - Few parents more open-minded
- A live-in teacher/ teach by female family members
for girls - Main Texts for these lucky girls Four Books for
Females ??? - An ideal daughter/ daughter-in-law/ wife/
mother??????
27II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- The most important female text
- The Text of the Great Ladies ???, of West Han
Dynasty (no authorship) - 8 chapters
- 105 stories of famous moral ladies
- Ch. 1-7 ladies in antiquity
- 1. queens mothers of important people
- 2. ladies who help their husbands (focus on
morality) - 3. clever intelligent wives mothers
28II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- 4. virginal obedient ladies
- 5. ladies acting according to yi(righteous), such
as sacrificing their lives assets for their
fathers, husbands, sons - 6. ladies with good reasoning arguments
- 7. Counter-examples of virtuous ladies, mainly
the bad queens, concubines of previous corrupt
kings - 8. Moral and famous ladies in West Han
29II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- E.g. Ch 1. queens mothers of important people
- Most famous Mencius mother changes the location
of their house 3 times for a good environment for
her son. - 1. next to a market -- Mencius learns to be a
merchant - 2. near the grave -- Mencius is following the
burial/ritual performers practices - 3. next to a school -- Mencius is surrounded by
the text-phrases, interested in studying
30II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- E.g. Ch. 2. ladies who help their husbands (on
moral aspect) - wife of Liuxiawei??? reminds Liu When dao did
not prevail in the kingdom (when the king was
corrupt), it was shameful to be rich and of high
status.
31II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- Teaching Aim help ones husband or sons
- E.g. on morality, on problem-solving, be virginal
pure, obedient, sacrifice of oneself, to
provide good upbringing for the children - These ladies
- do not plan for/ think about themselves.
- praised to impose/ bring good influence to
their closest males. - Females with a GOOD name/ highly regarded live
SOLELY for the male.
32II.2 Traditional Education for Chinese Girls
(till the end of the monarch)
- Later Classical Texts for Girls
- Theme as that of The Text of the Great Ladies
??? - 1. NuJie??, Prohibited Rules for the Female, by
Banzhiu?? - 2. Jiafen??, Models for the Family, by
Zimaguang??? - 3.Yuanzizifan????, Models of the Yuans Family,
by Yuancai?? - 4. Nufenjielui???? 156 ladies as models
- All by famous Confucian scholars
33III. Emotions Love among Chinese
- Arthur Kleinman (Harvard anthropologist, 1986
paper) Chinese tend to believe emotion to be
dangerous, value moderation?? in all matters, and
emphasize social harmony over individual
expression. - That is, emotional behavior is normatively
moderate or suppressed. - In traditional Chinese medicine, extreme emotions
are thought to cause/closely related to physical
illness (e.g. depression/worries illness in
liver ?????)
34III.1 Emotional Behavior in a Social Context
- Potter (1988 paper) provides a different
analysis Emotions are less relevant in China
than they are in the West. - Emotions are best ignored like minor aches and
pains, They do not achieve social ends and are
not needed to legitimate social relationships. - Harmful emotions can therefore be discouraged
others emotions can be expressed but ignored.
35III.1 Emotional Behavior in a Social Context
- According to Potters research, villagers in his
research did not expect emotional expressiveness
to help in achieving an end. (e.g. anger would
not help repeal an unpopular policy/ make a
travel permit available). - E.g The open expression of sorrow did not elicit
public sympathy. - Expression of sorrow did not elicit any valued
response, and sharing of emotion was not a sign
of intimacy between individuals.
36III.1 Emotional Behavior in a Social Context
- Chinese society/interpersonal relation
- harmony
- avoid conflict
- comply with group norm
- Childhood development
- suppress/ do not show emotions
- Extreme/ Strong emotions
- Discouraged
- ignored
37III.2 Romantic Love in Traditional Chinese
Community
- Western love basis of all relationships
- Chinese human attachment role duty,
responsibility - Potters research village in rural China
- Passionate/romantic love- not required for a
successful relation - social order/ relationships and behavior do not
require an emotional basis. - e.g. arranged marriages deliberate passionate
love between two persons harms social structure
38III.2 Love -- a Social Context
- E.g. Dad/Mom love a kid too much spoilt/ no
respect/ improper/ bring harm to the kid - Strong deliberate Love
- not affirming the social structure
- BUT to endanger it.
- Potter Romantic love is culturally alien in
Mainland China even marriage is based on good
feelings. - Similar to love in family one to work and
sacrifice on others , unconditional
responsibility and altrusim - Love/ oi-ching??, a new term, only since modern
Chinese in 1954
39III.2 Love in a Social Context
- Jankowiak (1993 paper)
- in his study of Hohhot, the capital of the inner
Mongolian Autonomous Region. - Romantic love as the theme of films and
magazines. Young people date and fall in love. - Jankowiak Romantic love existed well before the
founding of the Han dynasty, in some cases,
actually thrived in the face of powerful parental
opposition. - Famous ancient literature on love
- poems in Book of Songs (Early Zhou Dynasty) e.g.
Kwantsui?? - A long poem in Han (the 1st Chinese love story)
Southeast the Peacock Flies
40II.2 Love in a Social Context
- Traditional marriage arranged, without
passionate love but emphasis obligation duty - Yet, love between a man a prostitute/ a
concubine-- he can make his own choice of his
love.
41IV. Contemporary Psychological Beliefs
- 1. Locus of Control????
- 2. Externality the Nature of the Outcome???????
- 3. Effort and Ability Attributions in Academic
Situation????????
42IV.1 Locus of Control
- Locus of control internal/external
- Internal control???? the belief that
reinforcements are under the control of the
individual - External control???? reinforcements are under
the control of external forces, e.g. fate, luck,
chance - It is widely agreed in literature that because of
the collectivistic orientation, Chinese tend to
possess a stronger belief in external control
(fate, deterministic) than Westerners.
43IV.1 Locus of Control disagreement
- Tsui (1978 paper) HK Chinese undergraduates were
more internal than were American-born Chinese
undergraduates in the US. - Hung (1974 paper) undergraduates in Taiwan did
not differ from the Americans in internality. - Smith, Trompenaars, Dugan (1993 paper) Chinese
are not necessarily more external than are all
Westerners.
44IV.2 Externality the Nature of the Outcome
- Humility?, which originates from Confucianism, is
a norm in Chinese culture. Chinese employees in
Taiwan evaluated their performance less positive
than did their supervisors, a pattern opposite to
that commonly observed in the US.
45IV.2. Externality the Nature of the Outcome
- The humility norm is related to the attributional
pattern of the Chinese, who tend to make external
attributions for successes (others joint effort)
and internal attributions for failures (blaming
oneself). - HK Chinese subjects made self-effacing
attributions for their performance in public but
self-enhancing attributions in private. - The salience of the humility norm in Chinese
societies suggests that Chinese people select
more internal explanations for failures than for
success, the US the opposite.
46IV.2. Externality the Nature of the Outcome
- The internality of Chinese is qualified by the
nature of the outcome. - Chinese were more external for successful events
than were the US.
47IV.3 Effort and Ability Attributions in Academic
Situation
- Compared with Americans, Chinese believe that
academic achievements is more strongly related to
effort. - Chinese parents of primary students in Taiwan put
more stress on the importance of hard work, and
less on the importance of innate ability, than
did American parents in explaining their
childrens academic results. - Such an emphasis on efforts is rooted in human
malleability which is advocated by Confucianism.
48IV.4 Self-Concept
- Chinese culture group-oriented, believing the
group rather than the individual is the basic
unit in society. - This group-orientation hypothesis has obvious
implications for the conception of the self. - The collective self??? was more salient for
subjects from China than for the US. Chinese
identify themselves as the member of a specific
group. - Yet, Chinese subjects from HK responded at a
level similar to the US. - So, was the difference due to cultural or
political economic differences?
49IV.4 Beliefs about Self-Concept
- The idea of yuan? (predestined interpersonal
affinity) is endorsed in Chinese societies. - Yuan refers to the belief that interpersonal
outcomes are determined by fate or supernatural
forces. - Yuan, as an external explanation for those who
enjoy a positive interpersonal relationship and
protect the face of others who enjoy less
interpersonal relationship.
50IV.5 Collectivist Beliefs
- Chinese collectivistic
- Because the futures of individuals from the same
in-group are inter-related and that each persons
well-being depends upon the results of collective
effort. If each person follows the norms of the
group and acts in the interest of the group, the
group will be harmonious and prosperous. - E.g. Chinese subjects in HK allocated a larger
share of a group reward to in-group members than
did American subjects.
51IV.5 Collectivist Beliefs
- The collectiveness of Chinese leads them to
believe that an effective way to get things done
is often through ones guanxi ??(interpersonal
connections). - Chinese tend to believe that out-group members
are less likely to be dependable and trustworthy
than are members of the in-group. - HK Chinese were more likely to sue a stranger
than were US subjects.
52IV.5 Collectivist Beliefs
- In Chinese culture, it is widely believe that it
is more effective to resolve disputes through
negotiation and compromise rather than through
confrontation. - Chinese subjects from HK prefer mediation????
over adjudication?? in dispute processing,
whereas US subjects prefer both to the same
extent. - Chinese employees in HK, when ranked the five
conflict resolution compromise first and
competition last UK managers who worked in HK
competition second and compromise third.
53IV.6 Beliefs Related to Power Distance????
- Social structure for Chinese hierarchical and
exhibits a large power distance. - The basic belief is that the ideal way to
organize a collective is through a well-defined
hierarchy, with explicit responsibilities for
each role in the hierarchy. - E.g. the typical leadership pattern in Chinese
societies tends to be paternalistic ??and
authoritarian???.
54IV.7Primary Secondary Control
- Primary control is a predominant strategy in the
West. In order to attain ones goal and wishes,
one has to attempt to bring about objective
changes in the environment. - Secondary control is prevalent in the East.
Because of the emphasis on interdependence and
harmony in groups, people should show a stronger
tendency to adjust themselves to fit the
environment. - Chinese believe that secondary control is a more
effective way to attain their goals than is
primary control.
55IV.8 Beliefs about Uncertain Events
- British subjects tend to adopt a probabilistic
view of uncertainty and are able to assess the
likelihood of occurrence of uncertain events more
accurately. - The South-east Asian subject (including HK
people) tend to view the world in terms of total
certainty or uncertainty, and were less inclined
to make a probabilistic judgment of uncertain
events.
56IV.8 Beliefs about Uncertain Events
- A probabilistic view of the world is conductive
to a rational approach to decision-making and to
use of facts and figures in coming to a decision,
and it is derived from the social logic of low
power distance. - A non-probabilistic world-view would diminish the
importance of objective facts and figures, thus
making the role of intuition important and
arbitrary authority acceptable. e.g. major
business deals are made by Chinese tycoons (the
head of the company) rather than meticulous
calculations by the management.