ABSTRACT Hope, as conceptualized by Snyder's Hope Theory, is a cognitive process that involves goal setting, pathway thinking, and agency. While hope has been widely studied in older children and adults, limited research exists on measuring hope in early childhood. The present study addresses this gap by introducing two novel developmentally appropriate tasks—the Maze Task and the Egg Hunt Task—to assess hope in children aged 5 and 6. The Maze Task evaluates children's pathway thinking and agency through a series of structured mazes, analyzing perseverance, self‐talk, emotional responses, and problem‐solving strategies. The Egg Hunt Task, conducted 1 year later, refines the measurement by integrating verbal self‐assessments and structured prompts based on the Children's Hope Scale. Preliminary results from both tasks suggest that hope is present in early childhood, with children demonstrating goal‐directed behavior, flexible problem‐solving behavior, and varying degrees of self‐efficacy. Although some ceiling effects were observed, findings indicate that hope can be reliably measured before age 8. These novel methodologies contribute to the field by offering observational, interactive, age‐appropriate alternatives to traditional self‐report surveys. Future research should further refine these measures, explore the stability of hope across early development, and assess interventions that foster hope in young children. This article is categorized under: Cognitive Biology > Cognitive Development Psychology > Emotion and Motivation
Fraser et al. (Sun,) studied this question.