Title of article
Children’s Verbalizations and Cheating Behavior During Game Playing: The Role of Sociometric Status, Aggression, and Gender
Author/Authors
Ronnie M. Rubin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
14
From page
65
To page
78
Abstract
The first goal of this study was to investigate sociometric status, aggression, and gender differences
in children’s verbalizations and cheating behavior during game playing using a fine-grained observational
coding system. The second goal was to control for the effects of differential peer treatment
and bias on children’s behavior by observing children in a standardized procedure with unfamiliar
peer confederates. Participants were 111 second-grade African American children, half average and
half rejected sociometric status, half aggressive and half nonaggressive based on peer nominations,
and half boys and half girls. Rejected children engaged in more cheating behavior and made more
negative and argumentative verbalizations than average status children. Boys made more negative
and argumentative verbalizations than girls. Aggressive children did not differ from nonaggressive
children, in terms of either verbalizations or cheating behavior
Keywords
sociometric status , Gender , verbalizations , AGGRESSION , Cheating
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828675
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