Empathy as an Element of Promoting the Manifestation of Group Creativity and Survey on Empathic Ability of Korean Elementary School Students
Youngjin Woo 1, Jihyun Yoon 2, Seong-Joo Kang 1 *
More Detail
1 Korea National University of Education2 Dankook University* Corresponding Author

Abstract

Background:
We examined the importance of empathy, which was regarded as one of the elements that might assist in accelerating the manifestation of group creativity, and studied the state of empathic ability of Korean elementary school students.

Material and methods:
For such, a cognitive and affective empathic ability test was conducted over 228 students that were in their fifth and sixth grades of elementary school in Korea, and this result was indirectly compared with preceding research results of the United States and the Netherlands.

Results:
The mean score of perspective taking of Korean elementary school students, in cognitive empathy, appeared to be relatively higher than the mean score of the elementary school students in the United States and the Netherlands. The mean score of fantasizing appeared to be lower than the mean score of perspective taking. Moreover, empathic concern of Korean students, in affective empathy, appeared to be relatively lower than the mean score of elementary school students of the United States and the Netherlands. The mean score of empathic awakening appeared to be higher than the mean score of empathic concern, however, the mean score of emphatic awakening appeared to have failed to reach the mean.

Conclusions:
Educational implications for such was discussed.

License

This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Article Type: Research Article

EURASIA J Math Sci Tech Ed, 2017, Volume 13, Issue 7, 3849-3867

https://doi.org/10.12973/eurasia.2017.00761a

Publication date: 15 Jun 2017

Article Views: 2277

Article Downloads: 1400

Open Access References How to cite this article