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Working across religions, cultures, settings, and development: Protocol for wave 2 data collection with children and parents by the developing belief network

journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-06, 11:09 authored by Allison J Williams-Gant, Kara Weisman, Tamer G Amin, Maliki E Ghossainy, Ghadir Soueidan, Jenny Nissel, Praveen Kenderla, Marwa Abdel-Hak, Florencia K Anggoro, Samantha Bangayan, Emily RR Burdett, Emily Chau, Eva E Chen, Jallene Chua, Lezanie Coetzee, John D Coley, Audun Dahl, Jocelyn B Dautel, Elizabeth L Davis, Helen Elizabeth Davis, Adine DeLeon, Gil Diesendruck, Denise Evans, Aidan Feeney, Tze Kiet FongTze Kiet Fong, Xuqing Foo, Alison Garcia, Isabela Gonzalez-Rubio, Elena Guerrero Galaz, Michael Gurven, Ying Hu, Keila Huachorunto, Komang Indrawati, Benjamin D Jee, Michael Kahwa, Unity Kahwa, Ringking Korah, Hannah J Kramer, Tamar Kushnir, Natassa Kyriakopoulou, Shitshembiso Lebepe, Hea Jung Lee, Kirsten A Lesage, Patricia Leshabana, Dandan Li, Pearl Han Li, Jessica Tacza Llacua, Vongani Maluleke, Ashley Marin, Julia Marshall, Nthabiseng Masebe, Katherine McAuliffe, Abby McLaughlin, Anthea McMullan, Caitlin McShane, Casey Min, Mike Mutegeki, Olive Namara, Shaun Nichols, Ageliki Nicolopoulou, Mark Nielsen, Emily Otali, Katerina Parise, Xiomara Alicia Paucar, Ayse Payir, Sakina Poonawalla, Bolivar Reyes-Jaquez, Sophie Riddick, Peter C Rockers, Justin K Ruiz, Rifah Sanjidah, Laura Shneidman, Irini Skopeliti, Mahesh Srinivasan, Jessa Stegall, Joanna Stephens, Megan G Stutesman, Jiayue Sun, Amanda Tarullo, Laura K Taylor, Itangishatse Theogen, Desiree Toong, Esra Nur Turan-Küçük, Patrick Tusiime, Estefany Pizarro Ventura, Jingyi Xu, Nina Ye, Yue Yu, Meltem Yucel, Wenzhuo Zhang, Xin Zhao, Kathleen H Corriveau, Rebekah A Richert
The Developing Belief Network is a global research collaborative studying religious development in diverse social-cultural settings, with a focus on the intersection of cognitive mechanisms and cultural beliefs and practices in early and middle childhood. The current manuscript describes the study protocol for the network’s second wave of data collection, which aims to further explore the development and diversity of religious cognition and behavior using a multi-time point approach. This protocol is designed to investigate three key research questions—how children represent and reason about religious and supernatural agents, how children represent and reason about religion as an aspect of social identity, and how religious and supernatural beliefs are transmitted within and between generations—via a set of eight tasks for children between the ages of 5 and 13 years and a survey completed by their parents/caregivers. This study is being conducted in 41 distinct cultural-religious settings, spanning 16 countries and 12 written languages. In this manuscript, we provide detailed descriptions of all elements of this study protocol, and give a brief overview of the ways in which this protocol has been adapted for use in diverse religious communities. As one example of how this protocol has been implemented outside of the United States, we present Arabic- and English-language study materials for children being raised in one of the following religious traditions in Lebanon: the Druze faith, Maronite Christianity, Orthodox Christianity, Shia Islam, or Sunni Islam. We end with reflections on the challenges of developing and implementing large-scale, multi-site, multi-time point studies of child development; our approach to navigating these challenges; and our suggestions for how future researchers might learn from our experiences and build on the work presented here.

Funding

Funder: John Templeton Foundation | Grant ID: JTF61542

History

Preferred citation

Williams-Gant, A. J., Weisman, K., Amin, T. G., Ghossainy, M. E., Soueidan, G., Nissel, J., Kenderla, P., Abdel-Hak, M., Anggoro, F. K., Bangayan, S., Burdett, E. R. R., Chau, E., Chen, E. E., Chua, J., Coetzee, L., Coley, J. D., Dahl, A., Dautel, J. B., Davis, E. L.,... Richert, R. A. (2025). Working across religions, cultures, settings, and development: Protocol for wave 2 data collection with children and parents by the developing belief network. PLOS One, 20(9), e0330727-e0330727. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0330727

Journal title

PLOS One

Volume

20

Issue

9

Publication date

2025-01-01

Pagination

e0330727-e0330727

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Publication status

Published online

Online publication date

2025-09-05

eISSN

1932-6203

Language

en

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