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Sameer Mehta; Rahul R. Marathe; Balaraman Ravindran; Rofia Ramesh – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2025
The systematic literature review is based on a critical need in the area of values, where there are many uncertainties around universal definitions and drivers of values and traits. The study evaluated definitions, categories, drivers and the interdependence between values and personality traits and behaviours. Over 5,873 studies over a 70-year…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Social Values, Attitude Change, Personality Traits
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Karen Man Wa Kwan; Sylvia Yun Shi; Laura N. MacMullin; A. Natisha Nabbijohn; Diana E. Peragine; Doug P. VanderLaan; Wang Ivy Wong – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Children show less positivity toward gender-nonconforming (GN) than gender-conforming (GC) peers. Yet, little is known about children's reasoning about peers of varying gender expressions, including age-, gender-, and culture-related influences. We investigated how children aged 4- to 5- and 8- to 9-years-old in Hong Kong and Canada (N = 678)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Moral Values, Age Differences, Gender Differences
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Marley B. Forbes; Riley N. Sims; Melanie Killen – Developmental Science, 2026
Inequalities in access to important resources and opportunities between social groups persist throughout societies worldwide. Social psychological research has shown that adults often use meritocratic beliefs to justify the existence of such inequalities. Yet, the developmental origins of meritocratic beliefs have yet to be fully explored. This…
Descriptors: Social Psychology, Young Children, Young Adults, Evaluative Thinking
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Marie-Céline Gouwy; Dries H. Bostyn; Barbara De Clercq; Arne Roets – Journal of Adolescence, 2025
Introduction: The Moral Foundations Theory (MFT) identifies innate moral foundations that drive moral judgment, and are assumed to mature at different phases throughout development. However, core developmental aspects of moral foundations, such as normative age and gender differences from an MFT perspective, remain relatively unexplored,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Moral Values, Decision Making, Moral Development
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Walker, Sue; Lunn-Brownlee, Jo; Scholes, Laura; Johansson, Eva – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2020
Background: A growing body of research shows that the beliefs we hold about the nature of knowing and knowledge (epistemic beliefs) may mediate moral reasoning. However, a limitation of much of the research in the area of epistemic beliefs is the lack of a longitudinal approach. Aims: The study investigated longitudinal changes in Australian…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Beliefs, Epistemology, Foreign Countries
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Daniela Teodora Seucan; Raluca Diana Szekely-Copîndean; Laura Visu-Petra – Social Development, 2024
Understanding what others think and feel, an essential ingredient of social functioning, develops early on, allowing children to understand and evaluate other people's actions. To assess whether those actions break or uphold moral rules (moral judgments), children must consider the agent's intentions and whether the action harms or helps others.…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Theory of Mind, Moral Values, Punishment
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Talia Carl; Kay Bussey – Social Development, 2025
Research suggests that the fear of harsh punishment from parents encourages children's antisocial lie-telling as they attempt to avoid the punishment for their transgressions. In contrast, warm and supportive parenting practices foster internalization of moral rules and norms and an ability to resist the temptation, so children have no need to lie…
Descriptors: Parenting Styles, Deception, Antisocial Behavior, Punishment
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Neldner, Karri; Wilks, Matti; Crimston, Charlie R.; Jaymes, R. W. M.; Nielsen, Mark – Developmental Psychology, 2023
In industrialized societies, adults exhibit stable preferences for the types of people, animals, and entities they feel moral concern for (Crimston et al., 2016). Only one published study to date has utilized the moral circles paradigm to examine these preferences in children, finding that as children age, their preferences shift to become more…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Child Development, Familiarity, Preferences
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Glenn D. Walters – Journal of Moral Education, 2023
A growth mixture modeling (GMM) analysis of neutralization scores in 1,830 youth across six waves of data revealed evidence of a three-class model in which moral neutralization either increased (low accelerating), decreased (high decelerating), or remained the same (moderate stable) over time. Controlling for age, sex, race, group assignment, and…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Age Differences, Early Adolescents, Predictor Variables
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Yoo, Ha Na; Smetana, Judith G. – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Understanding distinctions between morality and conventions is an important milestone in children's moral development. The current meta-analysis integrated decades of social domain theory research (Smetana, 2006; Turiel, 1983) on moral and conventional judgments from early to middle childhood. We examined 95 effect sizes from 18 studies (2,707…
Descriptors: Social Theories, Moral Development, Moral Values, Age Differences
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Anupama Prashar; Parul Gupta; Yogesh K. Dwivedi – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Widespread academic dishonesty among higher education (HE) students has been a concern for higher education institutes (HEIs). Ethics literature reports that unintentional plagiarism is more prevalent among HE students and the root cause is, limited or no awareness of nuances of ethics concerning plagiarism resulting in poor ethical judgments.…
Descriptors: Ethics, Cheating, Plagiarism, Student Attitudes
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Yucel, Meltem; Drell, Marissa B.; Jaswal, Vikram K.; Vaish, Amrisha – Developmental Psychology, 2022
Young children robustly distinguish between moral norms and conventional norms (Smetana, 1984; Yucel et al., 2020). In existing research, norms about the fair distribution of resources are by definition considered part of the moral domain; they are not distinguished from other moral norms such as those involving physical harm. Yet an understanding…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Social Behavior, Social Attitudes, Ethics
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Navarro-Rodríguez, Christián Denisse; Vera Noriega, Jose A.; Bauman, Sheri – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2023
Although there is a body of literature that addresses victimization of adolescents based on their membership in stigmatized groups, there is little that focuses on this type of aggression delivered digitally. Furthermore, the extant literature typically focuses on the targets of such aggression, but scant attention has been paid to the aggressors.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Bullying, Aggression
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Baker, Erin Ruth; Liu, Qingyang – Early Education and Development, 2021
Research Findings: Children's capacities for complex socio-moral reasoning carries across domains; similarly, children's aggressive behaviors changes as a function of context. However, with a few exceptions, little research has considered children's socio-moral reasoning and aggressive subtypes in concert. The goals of the current study were to…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Child Behavior, Aggression, Gender Differences
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Myslinska Szarek, Katarzyna; Baryla, Wieslaw; Wojciszke, Bogdan – Developmental Psychology, 2023
Young children from a very early age not only prefer those who help others but also those who engage in altruistic helping. This study aims to test how children assess helping when the goal of the helping behavior is immoral. We argue that younger children consider only the helping versus hindering behavior, but older children distinguish their…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Childrens Attitudes, Helping Relationship, Antisocial Behavior
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