Victoria Talwar, ECP, Publishes Paper in Developmental Psychology on Children's Honesty Promotion Techniques
![Victoria Talwar](/education/files/education/styles/fullwidth_breakpoints_theme_moriarty_small_1x/public/channels/image/victoria_talwar_1400px.jpg?itok=dmK3Ld4h×tamp=1712175772)
Victoria Talwar, ECP Professor, Faculty of Education Interim Dean, and Lab Director of the , recently published a in Developmental Psychology that investigates the effects of honesty promotion techniques on children of different ages.
This study examined four honesty promotion techniques, including reading moral stories about honesty, increasing self-awareness, promising to tell the truth, and informing children about the positive effects of being honest. Techniques chosen to promote truth-telling by enhancing a child鈥檚 self-awareness and social obligation to honesty.
To promote preschool-aged children鈥檚 honesty, increasing self-awareness and a combination of modelling honesty and positive consequences were equally effective. In seven- to eight-year-old children, promising to tell the truth, modelling honesty, and positive consequences of honesty were all successful in promoting honesty. Notably, a combination of modelling truth-telling and observing positive consequences of being honest effectively reduced lie-telling across all ages.聽
鈥淚t may be that for younger children seeing themselves in the mirror reminded them of the adults鈥 expectations [for] their honesty and heightened their awareness of what they were doing,鈥 Talwar explained.聽