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Carrasco, Diego; Banerjee, Robin; Treviño, Ernesto; Villalobos, Cristóbal – Educational Psychology, 2020
The endorsement of anti-corruption norms is a normative assumption in legal systems with freedom of information acts, where citizens are expected to act as monitors of the public service. Tolerance of corruption counteracts this assumption. We studied tolerance of corruption among 8th graders from Latin-American samples of the International Civic…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Grade 8, Socioeconomic Status, Authoritarianism
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Banerjee, Robin; Bennett, Mark; Luke, Nikki – Child Development, 2012
Rule violations are likely to serve as key contexts for learning to reason about public identity. In an initial study with 91 children aged 4-9 years, social emotions and self-presentational concerns were more likely to be cited when children were responding to hypothetical vignettes involving social-conventional rather than moral violations. In 2…
Descriptors: Vignettes, Video Technology, Social Behavior, Behavior Standards
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Banerjee, Robin; Bennett, Mark; Luke, Nikki – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2010
This study examined children's understanding of the distinctive "self-presentational" impacts of moral and social-conventional rule violations. A sample of 80 children aged 7-8 and 9-10 years generated examples of interpersonal events that would upset others and events that would elicit social attention to the self. As expected, both age groups…
Descriptors: Children, Logical Thinking, Antisocial Behavior, Age Differences
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Novin, Sheida; Banerjee, Robin; Dadkhah, Asghar; Rieffe, Carolien – Social Development, 2009
Sociocultural differences in children's use and understanding of emotional display rules have been under-researched. In the present study, 56 Dutch and 56 Iranian children aged 10-11 years took part in a structured interview about their experiences of using emotional display rules. In comparison with the Dutch children, the Iranian sample was more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Affective Behavior, Behavior Standards, Children
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Watling, Dawn; Banerjee, Robin – Infant and Child Development, 2007
Previous research has suggested that the understanding of modesty--downplaying one's achievements to evoke a positive social evaluation--develops in the primary school years. However, very little is known about how children's understanding of modesty is associated with social contextual factors, such as audience type. A sample of 92 children aged…
Descriptors: Age, Audience Awareness, Audiences, Children