Journal article

The case of Pinocchio: teachers' ability to detect deception


Authors listReinhard, Marc-Andre; Dickhaeuser, Oliver; Marksteiner, Tamara; Sporer, Siegfried L.

Publication year2011

Pages299-318

JournalSocial Psychology of Education

Volume number14

Issue number3

ISSN1381-2890

eISSN1573-1928

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11218-010-9148-5

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
In a study with 365 teacher students, 447 teacher trainees, and 123 teachers, the ability to detect students' deception was tested. Participants judged the credibility of videotaped students who were accused of academic dishonesty (having cheated in a test). Half of these messages were actually true (students had not cheated on the test) and half of them were deceptive (students had cheated on the test). As expected and in line with findings on the influence of expertise on the ability to detect deception from other fields, we found that the overall accuracy rate of teachers was not higher than that of teacher trainees and teacher students. Moreover, we found no effect of teaching experience (years working as a teacher) on overall detection of deception accuracy. Interestingly, teachers were found to have a stronger truth bias and therefore had a lower accuracy in detecting deceptive messages than teacher students and teacher trainees (veracity effect). While teacher characteristics accounted for very little variance, senders' opportunity to prepare and their gender had strong effects. Detection accuracy was higher for messages where the student had no chance to prepare before being accused of cheating. Overall, independent, or experience, participants hold inaccurate beliefs about deception.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleReinhard, M., Dickhaeuser, O., Marksteiner, T. and Sporer, S. (2011) The case of Pinocchio: teachers' ability to detect deception, Social Psychology of Education, 14(3), pp. 299-318. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11218-010-9148-5

APA Citation styleReinhard, M., Dickhaeuser, O., Marksteiner, T., & Sporer, S. (2011). The case of Pinocchio: teachers' ability to detect deception. Social Psychology of Education. 14(3), 299-318. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11218-010-9148-5



Keywords


BELIEFSCATCHCheatingDetection of deceptionEXPERTISELAY PERSONSLIESNONVERBAL INDICATORSPOLICE OFFICERSTEACHERSTRUTH

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 02:44