Social norms of accompanied young children and observed crossing Behaviors

T. Rosenbloom, Yael Sapir-Lavid, Ofri Hadari-Carmi

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Introduction Social norms for accompanied young children and crossing behaviors were examined in two studies conducted in an Ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in Israel. Method In Study 1, road behaviors of young children crossing with and without accompaniment and older children were observed, and the actual social norm for accompanied school children younger than 9-years-old was examined. In Study 2, the perceived norm of accompaniment was tested by questionnaires. Results Young children who crossed without accompaniment exhibited poorer crossing skills compared to older children and to young children crossing with accompaniment. In the four locations observed, the actual accompaniment rate ranged between 15%–60%. The perceived social norm for child accompaniment was lower than the actual norm. Conclusions The discussion refers to both theoretical issues and their practical implications.
Original languageAmerican English
StatePublished - 2012
EventICTTP - Groningen, Netherlands
Duration: 1 Jan 20121 Jan 2012

Conference

ConferenceICTTP
Country/TerritoryNetherlands
CityGroningen
Period1/01/121/01/12

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  • Conference Contributed

    Rosenbloom, T. (Invited speaker)

    1 Jan 2012

    Activity: Talk or presentationInvited talk

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