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Chapter 11: Moral Development

Chapter 11: Moral Development. What is moral development?. Changes in thoughts, feelings and behaviors regarding standards of right and wrong Intrapersonal Interpersonal – regulates social interaction & arbitrates conflict. What is moral development?.

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Chapter 11: Moral Development

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  1. Chapter 11: Moral Development

  2. What is moral development? • Changes in thoughts, feelings and behaviors regarding standards of right and wrong • Intrapersonal • Interpersonal – regulates social interaction & arbitrates conflict

  3. What is moral development? • 1. How do individuals think about moral decisions? • 2. How do they behave in moral circumstances? • 3. How do they feel about moral matters?

  4. Can Morality be Examined Apart from Religion? • Religion provides the assumptions which underpin moral reasoning and decisions. • Religion takes morality from individual to collective and universal. • Religion provides the authority for moral prescriptions.

  5. Morality - Children & Rules • Turiel – 1978, 1983 • 5-year-old children conceptualize the social world in three separate domains • Moral • Social-conventional • Psychological (personal) • They realize that the rules for each of these have different levels of changeability.

  6. Kohlberg’s Theory • Heinz dilemma – • Wife near death • One drug might save her • Cost $200 to make; charged $2000 • Heinz raised $1000, offered to pay later • Druggist said no • Heinz stole the drug

  7. Kohlberg’s Theory • Level 1: Preconventional • External rewards & punishments • Level 2: Conventional • Abide by internal standards of others (law or parents) • Level 3: Postconventional • Recognizes alternative codes, explores options, chooses one

  8. Kohlberg - Preconventional • Stage 1 – heteronomous • Moral thinking is tied to punishment • Stage 2 – individualism, instrumental purpose & exchange • “live & let live” • Equity of exchange: “I do you a favor; you do me one.”

  9. Kohlberg - Conventional • Stage 3: Mutual interpersonal expectations, relationships & interpersonal conformity • Value trust, caring & loyalty to others; children like “good girl; good boy” • Stage 4: Social systems morality • Understanding the social order, law, justice and duty

  10. Kohlberg – Postconventional • Stage 5: Social contract or utility and individual rights • Values, rights & principles undergird the law; laws are evaluated by how well they protect human rights & values • Stage 6: Universal ethical principles • Moral standard based on universal human rights; will follow conscience rather than law

  11. Kohlberg Stage 7? • Cosmic perspective • See one’s self as one with the universe • Already a religious position - • Hindu, New Age

  12. Kohlberg’s Critics • Link between moral thought & moral behavior? • Albert Bandura – people do not usually engage in harmful conduct until they have justified the morality of their actions to themselves • Socially worthy cause • God’s will

  13. Kohlberg’s Critics • Rest – • Assessment techniques • What are the moral issues? • Stages 5 & 6 do not stand up across cultures • Example – Buddhist monks & emphasis on compassion • India – social rules are inevitable

  14. Kohlberg’s Critics • Haidt (2008) • Traditionalist [collectivist] societies expect individuals to limit their desires and play their roles within the group • “Western conservatives also seem to be morally challenged.” • Conclusion: Kolhberg has an individualist, liberal, progress bias.

  15. Kohlberg’s Critics • Carol Gilligan – gender bias • Justice perspective – male norm that puts principles above people • Care perspective – moral perspective that views people in terms of connectedness and emphasizes relationships & caring for others

  16. Social Conventional Reasoning • Social rules & conventions are arbitrary & created by people • Moral rules are obligatory, widely-accepted, and somewhat impersonal • Ethics exist apart from social convention

  17. Moral Behavior among Children • Factors (Behaviorist view) • Reinforcement & punishment • Depends upon consistency & timing • Models • Depends upon characteristics such as warmth & attractiveness • Situations • Children behave inconsistently depending upon peer pressure, likelihood of being caught, personal characteristics • Self-control • Convinced by reasoning, punishment

  18. Social-cognitive Theory of Morality • Albert Bandura • Moral competence – knowledge, capabilities, skills, awareness of rules • Moral performance – motivation, rewards, incentives • Self-regulation – avoiding self-condemnation and fostering self-satisfaction & self-worth

  19. Moral Emotion - Guilt • Sigmund Freud • The desire to avoid feeling guilty is the foundation of moral behavior. • Superego consists of: • Ego ideal – rewards by conveying a sense of pride and personal value • Conscience – punishes disapproved behaviors by making the child feel guilty & worthless

  20. Moral Emotion - Empathy • Responding to another’s feelings with a similar emotional response • Some infants show global empathy • 1-2 years, may feel discomfort but cannot translate into action • Early childhood – add perspective-taking • 10-12 may feel social or humanitarian empathy

  21. Raising Moral Children: Parental Discipline – Hoffman (1970) • Recommends Induction • Reasoning, consequences • Works best with older children, middle SES • Love withdrawal (anxiety) • Don’t like you; going to leave you • Power assertion (hostility) • Spanking, threatening, removing privileges • Makes parents appear to have poor self-control

  22. Parenting & Morality - Thompson • Warm-responsive parent-child relationships • Secure attachment linked to conscience development • Proactive strategies • Conversational dialogue • Other strategies – • Be a good role model • Foster an internal sense of morality • Tell them about expected behaviors • Use reason with punishment

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