The good cheat: Benevolence and the justification of collective cheating.

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_6BCF39EF1B6B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The good cheat: Benevolence and the justification of collective cheating.
Journal
Journal of Educational Psychology
Author(s)
Pulfrey Caroline, Durussel Kevin, Butera Fabrizio
ISSN
1939-2176
0022-0663
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2018
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
110
Number
6
Pages
764-784
Language
english
Abstract
“Sharing is caring” the old adage goes, with its implied message that both are morally desirable. But what if it’s test answers that students are sharing with their friends? Integrating values, cheating and in-group bias theory, we hypothesize that adherence to group-loyalty benevolence values—considered as some of the most moral values—positively predicts the acceptance of collective cheating, that is students cheating together with in-group peers, when competition is salient. Operationalizing competition in three different ways we test this in four studies. In Study 1, adherence to benevolence values predicted positive attitudes towards collective but not individual cheating among students presented (vs. not) with a portrayal of society as competitive. Study 2 revealed that, within the competitive context of an end-of-year exam, adherence to benevolence values positively predicted moral disengagement towards collective cheating but negatively predicted individual cheating. Study 3 showed that valuing both being a dependable friend and attaining power and influence, predicted the acceptance of collective cheating. Finally, in Study 4, carried out with dyads of students, groups composed of students who knew each other cheated more than students composed of strangers. Furthermore, dyad adherence to power values positively predicted cheating behavior among dyads that knew (vs. did not know) each other. These results signal that group loyalty can, in certain conditions, lead to justifying and engaging in collective cheating, and that the motivational underpinnings may be the moral status of benevolence values.
Keywords
Education, Developmental and Educational Psychology
Web of science
Create date
15/03/2018 18:54
Last modification date
10/03/2020 14:33
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