Title: Aggression, Altruism, and Moral Development
1Aggression, Altruism, and Moral Development
2- Instrumental aggression major goal is to gain
access to objects, space, or privileges - Hostile aggression major goal is to harm or
injure - Both form and expression of aggression change
with age
3Figure 14.1 Trajectories of mother-rated
aggression for children from age 2 to age 9
years. ADAPTED FROM NICHD EARLY CHILD CARE
RESEARCH NETWORK, 2004.
4Rough-and-Tumble vs. Aggression?
- Does rough and tumble play promote social
development? - rough and tumble could easily be misinterpreted
5Costabile et al. (1991)
- Strength and type of blows
- Facial expressions
- Presence or absence of laughter and angry words
- Presence or absence of a crowd watching
- Presence or absence of injury and crying
6Sex Differences
- On average, boys more aggressive
- Not until 2 ½-3 years of age though!
- Biological differences
- Socialization differences
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8THE DEVELOPMENT OF AGGRESSION
- Overt aggression declines from middle childhood
through adolescence - Relational aggression in girls, and indirect
aggression in males increases
9Individual Differences in Aggression
- Aggressive toddlers ? aggressive 5 year olds
- Aggression between 3 and 10 ? aggression and
antisocial behavior later in life
10Figure 14.2. Aggression in childhood predicts
criminal behavior in adulthood for both males and
females. FROM HUESMANN, ERON, LEFKOWITZ,
WALDER, 1984.
11Individual Differences in Aggression
- Few individuals are highly aggressive
- 10-15 of classmates are abused by bullies
- Proactive aggressors
- Reactive aggressors
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13Social Cognition of Aggression
- Dodge et al.
- Kindergarten to fifth grade
- Given written descriptions of aggressive and
nonaggressive children, asked to name others in
class who fit description - Aggressive males
- Participants aggressive and nonaggressive boys
14Social Cognition of Aggression
- Stories varied on
- Actions
- Negative outcome vs. Ambiguous outcome
- Recipient of action
- Self vs. Other
- Instigator of action
- Aggressive vs. Nonaggressive
- Task
- Decide why event occurred, indicate how they
would respond
15Social Cognition of Aggression
- Results
- Hostile intent attributed more often when
aggressive boy was instigator - Hostile intentions attributed to negative
outcomes more than ambiguous outcomes - When imagined self as recipient, aggressive boys
attributed more hostile intent, even in ambiguous
situations (hostile attributional bias)
16Social Cognition of Aggression
- aggressive boys biased
- may lead retaliation
- other children biased
- This seems to be a characteristic of reactive
aggressors
17Social Cognition of Aggression
- Proactive aggressors may have friends and do not
feel as disliked as reactive aggressors, so they
may not be as likely to have a hostile
attributional bias - Proactive aggressors plan an aggressive
response to achieve an instrumental goal - Expect positive outcomes
- Feel capable of dominating others
18Support for Aggression
- Peers
- Reinforcement
- Elicitation
- Families
- Coercive cycles
19Origins of Coercive Cycles
- Parental behavior
- Ineffective at controlling child, parent loses
control - Indiscriminate use of rewards/punishments
- Characteristics of child
- Arrested development
- Insensitive to social stimuli
20Prosocial Behavior and Altruism
- Altruism concern for the welfare of others and
willingness to act on that concern - 12 to 18 month olds offer toys to peers
- Toddlers can express sympathy
- Verbally rebuking children and physically
punishing them reduces compassion - Discipline based on affective explanation
increases compassion
21Prosocial Behavior and Altruism
- Developmental Trends in Altruism
- 2-3 year olds show sympathy/compassion
- 4-6 year olds more real helping acts, fewer
during pretend play
22Prosocial Behavior and Altruism
- Sex Differences in Altruism
- Girls are more likely to be helpful, generous,
and compassionate than boys (small difference) - Boys less cooperative and more competitive more
interested in looking good or attaining
status/dominance over others
23Prosocial Reasoning
- Children with well-developed role-taking skills
are more helpful - Prosocial moral reasoning
- Preschoolers tend to be self-serving
- Older adolescents are much more responsive to the
needs of others
24- One day a girl named Mary was going to a friends
birthday party. On her way she saw a girl who
had fallen down and hurt her leg. The girl asked
Mary to go to her house and get her parents so
they could come and take her to a doctor. But if
Mary did, she would be late to the party and miss
the ice-cream, cake, and all the games. What
should Mary do?
25Prosocial Reasoning
- Eisenberg found that responses formed an
age-related sequence - Hedonistic responses motivated by consideration
of selfish gain - Needs oriented consideration of others
feelings and needs - Stereotyped try to gain approval
- Empathic orientation judgments include
sympathetic feelings - Internalized values based on internalized values
26Prosocial Reasoning
- Also observed behavior in classroom for 2 months
(4 and 5 year olds) - Hedonistic and needs-oriented were most common
responses - Needs-oriented reasoning more likely to share
- Hedonistic less likely to share
- Empathy an emotional experience in response to
another persons emotional state or situation
that is similar to that persons emotion and is
accompanied by concern for the other person
27Socialization of Prosocial Behavior
- Modeling
- Disciplinary techniques (Hoffman)
- Power assertion
- Love withdrawal
- Induction
28Socialization of Prosocial Behavior
- Zahn-Waxler Radke-Yarrow
- Measured mothers reactions to events where their
child caused distress or witnessed distress - Affective explanation
- Neutral explanation
- No explanation
29Socialization of Prosocial Behavior
- Attributions
- Attribute a behavior to selfbowling study
30Moral Development
- How Developmentalists Look at Morality
- Affective component stressed by psychoanalytic
theorists moral affects - Cognitive component stressed by
cognitive-developmental theorists moral
reasoning - Behavioral component stressed by social
learning and social information-processing
theorists moral behavior
31Moral Development
- The Affective Component of Moral Development
- Freuds Theory of Oedipal Morality
- Superego develops during phallic stage
- Identifies with same-sex parent
- Internalizes same-sex moral standards
- Girls have weaker superegos than boys
32Moral Development
- Evaluation of Freuds Theory
- Pride, shame, guilt are important for ethical
conduct - Internalization of standards is vital
- Details of theory unsupported
- Harsh discipline less morality
- Boys not more moral than girls
- Underestimated when children begin expressing
morality
33- Story A. A little boy who is called John is in
his room. He is called to dinner. He goes into
the dining room. But behind the door there was a
chair, and on the chair there was a tray with 15
cups on it. John couldnt have known that there
was all this behind the door. He goes in, the
door knocks against the tray, bang go the 15
cups, and they all get broken.
34- Story B. Once there was a little boy whose name
was Henry. One day when his mother was out he
tried to reach some jam in the cupboard. He
climbed onto a chair and stretched out his arm.
But the jam was too high up, and he couldnt
reach itWhile he was trying to get it, he
knocked over a cup. The cup fell down and broke.
35Moral Development
- The Premoral Period
- Heteronomous Morality
- Objective responsibility
- Immanent justice
- Autonomous Morality
36Moral Development
- Moving From Heteronomous to Autonomous Morality
- Cognitive maturation decline in egocentrism,
increase in role-taking - Social experience equal status with peers is
vital - Lessen respect for adult authority
- Increases self and peer respect
- Shows rules are arbitrary
37Moral Development
- Evaluation of Piaget
- Describes general direction of change in moral
judgment fairly well - Underestimates moral capacities of young children
38Moral Development
- Intentions Nelson (1980)
- Read story in which child threw a ball to
playmate - Motives were good or bad
- Consequences were positive or negative
- Acts ending in positive consequences judged more
favorably than those ending in harm - Good intentions judged more favorably than bad
39Moral Development
- by age 4, recognize the difference between
truthfulness and lying - approve of telling the truth and disapprove of
lying - evaluate personal injury more harshly than
property injury - more tolerant of immoral acts followed by an
apology
40Moral Development
- Social Conventional Reasoning (Turiel)
- 2 and 3 y/o interviewed about drawings depicting
familiar moral and social conventional
transgressions - By 34 months, saw moral transgressions as more
wrong - By 42 months, said moral violations would still
be wrong if undetected
41- In Europe, a woman was near death from a special
kind of cancer. There was one drug that doctors
thought might save her. It was a form of radium
that a druggist in the same town had recently
discovered. The drug was expensive to make, but
the druggist was charging 2000, or 10 times the
cost of the drug, for a small (possibly
life-saving) dose. Heinz, the sick womans
husband, borrowed all the money he could, about
1000, or half of what he needed. He told the
druggist that his wife was dying and asked him to
sell the drug cheaper or to let him pay later.
The druggist replied No, I discovered the drug,
and Im going to make money from it. Heinz then
became desperate and broke into the store to
steal the drug for his wife. Should Heinz have
done that?
42Moral Development
- Level 1 Preconventional Morality
- Stage 1 Punishment-and-Obedience Orientation
- Goodness or badness depends on consequences of
act bad acts are punished - Stage 2 Naïve Hedonism
- Conform to rules to gain rewards
43Moral Development
- Level 2 Conventional Morality
- Stage 3 Good Boy or Good Girl Orientation
- Moral behavior pleases, helps, or is approved of
by others - Stage 4 Social-Order-Maintaining Morality
- Right conforms to legal authority rules maintain
social order
44Moral Development
- Level 3 Postconventional (or Principled)
Morality - Stage 5 The Social-Contract Orientation
- Laws should express will of majority, and further
human welfare if not, challenge them - Stage 6 Morality of Individual Principles of
Conscience - Individual abstract moral guidelines that
transcend laws - Rare (a hypothetical construct)
- No longer measured
45Moral Development
- Support for Kohlbergs Theory
- Are Kohlbergs Stages an Invariant Sequence?
- Individuals do proceed through stages in order
- Stages are not skipped
- Stage 3 or 4 is highest level for most people
46Moral Development
- Criticisms of Kohlbergs Approach
- Issues with consistency
- Ecological validity
- Is Kohlbergs Theory Incomplete?
- Emphasizes moral reasoning, did not focus on
moral affect or behavior - Thought mature moral reasoning would lead to
moral behavior - Supported by research
47Moral Development
- Criticisms (cont)
- Limited scope
- Is Kohlbergs Theory Culturally Biased?
- Some aspects of moral development vary among
societies - Cultural beliefs define morality
- Is Kohlbergs Theory Gender Biased?
- Morality of justice for males, versus morality of
caring for females - Not supported by research
48Moral Development
- Criticisms (cont)
- Does Kohlberg Underestimate Young Children?
- Yes, as his focus was on legalistic concepts
- Did not examine distributive justice
49Moral Development
- Damon distributive justice rationales
- Level 0 (birth-5)
- Level 1 (5-6)
- Level 2 (6-7)
- Level 3 (8)