Are children able to distinguish among the concepts of aloneness, loneliness, and solitude?

School-age children’s ability to distinguish among the concepts of aloneness, loneliness, and solitude was the focus of this study. This ability has been largely neglected by researchers. Also, the relation of this ability with self-reported loneliness was examined. Individual interviews were conduc...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of behavioral development 2004-09, Vol.28 (5), p.435-443
1. Verfasser: Galanaki, Evangelia
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description School-age children’s ability to distinguish among the concepts of aloneness, loneliness, and solitude was the focus of this study. This ability has been largely neglected by researchers. Also, the relation of this ability with self-reported loneliness was examined. Individual interviews were conducted with 180 second, fourth, and sixth graders from Athens, Greece. Their responses were qualitatively and quantitatively analysed. Results showed that school-age children were able to perceive the differences between aloneness and loneliness, although they frequently associated being alone with feeling lonely. Nearly half of them perceived the motivational dimension, which distinguishes voluntary from involuntary aloneness. The ability to recognise the existence of beneficial aloneness, that is, solitude, was extremely limited among second graders, but increased dramatically up to the beginning of adolescence. About two thirds of the total sample acknowledged the human desire to be alone. Girls were significantly more able than boys to perceive the differences between aloneness and loneliness, the motivational dimension, and the desire to be alone. More than two-thirds of the total sample had experienced loneliness, but this experience appeared to be unrelated to their understanding of the various aloneness concepts. Age and gender differences, as well as children’s various justifications of their responses, are discussed in the framework of the existing theoretical and research literature on children’s aloneness, loneliness, and solitude.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Education Source (EBSCOhost); SAGE Journals
subjects Age Differences
Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child development
Children
Comprehension
Concept Formation
Concepts
Developmental psychology
Differentiation
Elementary School Students
Foreign Countries
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gender Differences
Grade 2
Grade 4
Grade 6
Greece
Loneliness
Motivation
Psychological Patterns
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Solitude
title Are children able to distinguish among the concepts of aloneness, loneliness, and solitude?
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