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Study: Religious children less likely to be generous

<p>All kids can be a little selfish, but <a href="http://www.cell.com/current-biology/pdf/S0960-9822(15)01167-7.pdf" target="_blank">according to a new study</a>, nonreligious children are more generous than their religious peers. </p><p>The study looked at kids from China, Jordan, South Africa, Turkey, Canada and the U.S.; and compared Christian, Muslim and nonreligious children.</p><p>All of the kids were put through a series of tests to judge their behavior. First, kids were given stickers and instructions to keep some, and then allocate some to classmates that weren't there. Nonreligious kids gave more than Christian and Muslim kids.</p><p>Second, kids were shown scenes of bumping or pushing and were asked to rate how mean the action was and what the bully deserved. Muslims suggested the harshest punishment, followed by Christians and then nonreligious children. </p><p>The children's parents also assessed their child's empathy, morality and how often they attended religious services.</p><p>Worldwide, Christianity and Islam are currently the two largest religions. <a href="http://www.pewforum.org/2015/04/02/religious-projections-2010-2050/" target="_blank">According to Pew Research</a>, these religions are estimated to continue growing throughout the next decades, and the nonreligious portion of the population will drop.</p><p><i>This video includes images from Getty Images and an image from </i><a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/noahfans/5102313879/in/photolist-8LSG9X-Mzh88-3Ejz1Y-4s77Ei-9iNwoP-9iNwvR-9iRDNq-9iREsh-detaP-4dncQv-nF6Msx-dYRmsX-e1F1qZ-62xkQF-nD5QdS-noDami-nEQsYZ-nEQt3B-nF8oKD-noCKEx-nGUNmt-nF7iqm-e6MXJi-4xgVRf-5sednL-dYGAsb-gzYLY-rWZVN7-9oKAdY-bEwS6Y-fkAvrh-dk6zSP-4TrHaD-Cjv6v-A5ZAQG-2VCjK-dX6YC9-pSwdz-noCKzc-dUHhGY-4xcKmK-4xcK1c-dVixBR-dVixBz-dYGArQ-dYASPt-dYGAtU-dYGAro-dYGAth-dYGArC" target="_blank"><i>Liza / CC BY SA 2.0</i></a><i>. </i></p>
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A study released Thursday in the journal of “Current Biology” claims that children of a nonreligious background tend to be more generous and altruistic than children from religious families.

The study examined the behaviors of 1,151 children aged 5 to 12 from around the world. The examination included children from six countries.

Altruism was measured through several activities, which involved sharing and reactions to social injustices.

Parents were asked to identify the religion of their children, and their level of involvement in religious practices. Nearly 43 percent of the children were Muslim, 27 percent were nonreligious and 24 percent were Christian. The remaining 6 percent were from other religions.

The study showed that Christian children did not differ that much from Muslim children in their altruism. But what the study showed was the two groups of children were significantly less altruistic than nonreligious children in the exercises given to the children. The study also showed that the frequency of religious practices were a predictor on how altruistic a child tended to be.

“Overall, our findings cast light on the cultural input of religion on prosocial behavior and contradict the common-sense and popular assumption that children from religious households are more altruistic and kind toward others,” the study concluded. “More generally, they call into question whether religion is vital for moral development, supporting the idea that the secularization of moral discourse will not reduce human kindness.”

Americans might disagree with the findings of the survey. A Pew Research Center survey in 2014 found that 53 percent of Americans said that believing in God is essential to morality.

Justin Boggs is a writer for the E.W. Scripps National Desk. Follow him on Twitter @jjboggs.