The concept of death in 4 to 5 year old Hong Kong Chinese children

Mun Amanda WONG, Thomas G. POWER

Research output: Contribution to conferencePapers

Abstract

Research shows that young children’s understanding of death varies considerably by culture. The purpose of this study was to examine the concepts of death held by Chinese kindergarten children in Hong Kong. Eighty-three 4- to 5-year-olds were interviewed about their understanding of six death sub-concepts: inevitability, universality, irreversibility, biological cessation, psychological cessation, and causality. Parents of 67 children completed questionnaires, providing demographic information and describing how they had spoken with their child about death. Results showed that most children understood inevitability and irreversibility and that an intermediate number understood universality and biological/psychological cessation. Understanding of causality was the most limited. Parental education and family size were positively associated with children’s understanding of death, as were the experiences of losing a pet or a grandparent. Finally, children of parents who talked with them about afterlife showed the most advanced level of understanding in several areas. Implications for studies on young children’s death concepts are discussed. Copyright © 2023 ACEID.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2023
EventThe 9th Asian Conference on Education & International Development - Tokyo, Japan
Duration: 27 Mar 202330 Mar 2023
https://aceid.iafor.org/

Conference

ConferenceThe 9th Asian Conference on Education & International Development
Abbreviated titleACEID2023
Country/TerritoryJapan
CityTokyo
Period27/03/2330/03/23
Internet address

Citation

Wong, M., & Power, T. G. (2023, March). The concept of death in 4 to 5 year old Hong Kong Chinese children. Paper presented at The 9th Asian Conference on Education & International Development (ACEID2023), Tokyo, Japan.

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