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An investigation of planned helping behavior
Authors:Paul R. Amato
Affiliation:Institute of Family Studies, Lewis House, Melbourne Australia
Abstract:It is argued that stable, individual differences in helping behavior have not generally been observed in previous research because of the type of helping studied. This paper advocates the study of planned helping behavior as opposed to spontaneous helping behavior. The results of three studies are reported. In Study 1, an instrument designed to measure level of involvement in planned helping activities was developed. Scores on this instrument were found to be stable over a 7-month period. Further analysis revealed two major types of planned helping: (a) formal, organizational helping and (b) informal helping between friends and family. Study 2 examined a variety of intrapsychic and demographic correlates of formal and informal planned helping. Study 3 found support for the hypothesis that people in helping professions have higher levels of involvement in everyday planned helping than do people in nonhelping occupations. It is concluded that the study of planned helping, although posing methodological difficulties, is a necessary adjunct to experimental research.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Paul R. Amato   Institute of Family Studies   766 Elizabeth St.   Melbourne   Victoria 3000   Australia.
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