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Predictors of children's understandings of death: age, cognitive ability, death experience and maternal communicative competence
Authors:Hunter Sally B  Smith Delores E
Institution:Department of Child and Family Studies, University of Tennessee, Knoxville 37996-1912, USA. sbhunter@utk.edu
Abstract:A child's age, cognitive ability, and exposure to death in the environment have been documented as major factors affecting the formation of a mature death concept. The present study investigated the relationships between these three factors (age, cognitive ability, and death experience) and children's understandings of death, as well as the relationship between mothers' communicative competence and children's understandings of death. Thirty-seven children (ages 48-96 months) completed three cognitive tasks and answered four dichotomous questions about death. Their mothers (N = 37) responded in writing to 16 questions about death that children are likely to ask. Results showed significant relationships between age and understanding, between seriation ability and understanding, and between death experience and understanding. There was no statistically significant relationship between maternal response competence and children's understandings of death. Implications are discussed.
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