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2024 | 66 | 4 | 299 - 308

Article title

DO STORIES ABOUT LYING AND HONESTY REDUCE LIE-TELLING BEHAVIOURS IN CHILDREN?

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Since lying behaviour is considered a negative phenomenon, except for prosocial lies, it has inspired theoretical and applied research on how to reduce such behaviours. Therefore, in the current study, we aimed to examine whether children’s lie-telling behaviours are affected by honesty- and lie-themed stories using an experimental design. A total of 176 children (85 girls), aged 4 to 5 years, were included in the study. We randomly assigned participants to three different experimental groups in which they were told the importance of honesty the short-term negative consequences of lying (Pinocchio), and the fact that lying is a terrible behaviour with important consequences (The Boy Who Cried Wolf). No moral story was told to the children in the control group. Then, we utilized a “temptation resistance task” to measure the lie-telling behaviours of the children in the control and experimental groups. The results showed that the children in the control group lied more often than the children in all the experimental groups. The analyses conducted to ascertain the differences among the groups also revealed that children who listened to Pinocchio used significantly fewer lie-telling behaviours compared to the children who listened to the honesty story and the children in the control group.

Year

Volume

66

Issue

4

Pages

299 - 308

Physical description

Contributors

  • Selcuk University, Faculty of Letters, Department of Psychology, Konya, Turkey

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-a9c60bf0-7dc0-4924-ad39-28356d7a97cf
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