“…Current findings need to be replicated in the primary school setting, given that the secondary school period features increased academic demands and higher expectations for student behaviour and independence in combination with less intensive support from teacherspotentially altering the nature and strength of relationships between CU traits, punishment insensitivity, and academic performance. Finally, given evidence for differences in the presentation and correlates of CU traits in East Asian and Western nations (Allen, Shou, Wang, & Bird, 2020;Sng et al, 2018;Sng, Hawes, Hwang, Allen, & Fung, 2020), and differences in teacher classroom management practices and means of assessing student academic achievement (Lewis, Romi, Qui, & Katz, 2005;Romi, Lewis, & Roache, 2013), there may be cultural variation in the relationships between CU traits, punishment insensitivity, and school grades. Future research should strive to investigate cultural differences in the interplay between CU traits and teacher-child interaction.…”