Title: Moral Developmental Theory
1Moral Developmental Theory
2What is Morality?
- what is a virtuous man, and what is a virtuous
school and society which educates a virtuous
man? (Socrates) - What is a virtuous person?
- Are we born good or bad?
- Or do we become good or bad?
- Is a virtuous person someone who does a lot of
virtuous deeds?
3Moral Reasoning
4Piaget
- The godfather of cognitive developmentalism
- Research morality by investigating
- Lying
- The rules of the game
- Clumsiness
- Stealing
- Piaget proposes that morality consists of a
system of rules, and the essence of all morality
is to be sought for in the respect which the
individual acquires those rules (Piaget 1932,
pp. 1) - He explored a childs moral reasoning through the
moral realities of the childhood game of
marbles - Interviewed over 100 children from Switzerland
about the rules of the game of marbles and
discovered a progression in the childs actual
practice of the rules and the consciousness of
rules.
5The Game of Marbles
6(No Transcript)
7Heteronomy and Autonomy
- This progression is not viewed as 3 separate
stages, but a two moralities - Heteronomy, or the condition of being under the
domination of an outside authority, either human
or divine. - Autonomy, or independence or freedom, as of the
will or one's actions. - The two moralities are based on relationships
with parents and peers and are in conflict with
each other.
8Piagets Stories
- There was a little boy called Julian. His father
had gone out and Julian thought it would be fun
to play with his fathers ink-pot. First he
played with the pen, and then he made a little
blot on the table cloth. - A little boy called Augustus once noticed that
his fathers ink-pot was empty. One day while his
father was away he thought of filling the ink-pot
so as to help his father, and so that he should
find it full when he came home. But while he was
opening the ink-bottle he made a big blot on the
table cloth. - Q. Are the two children equally guilty? Which of
the two is the naughtiest?
9Piaget
- Development was a continuation and a gradual
movement. - Co-operation with peers led to autonomous
morality. - The denser the society the quicker the stage
movement. - Heteronomous obedience can be found in adulthood
- Provides the corner-stones for Kohlberg Gibbs
10Piaget Summary
- Piaget provided a universalistic view of
morality, with moral reasoning and behaviour
being judged by a collection of timeless and
universal principles, common to all of humanity,
in terms of which any culture can be judged.
11Kohlberg
- Laurence Kohlberg (1927 1987) is one of the
most frequently cited psychologists in the social
and behavioural sciences. - During WW II as an engineer on a freighter he
assisted Jews escaping from Germany to Palestine. - Gained his BSc Psychology in one year at the
University of Chicago. - Worked at the University of Chicago and Harvard
University. - Set up just community schools in US after his
work in a Kibbutz - Committed suicide after struggling with
depression and pain caused by a tropic disease he
contracted in Belize in 1971.
12Kohlberg
13Kohlberg
14These 3 levels reflect differences in the
relationship between an individual and societys
rules and expectations
- Pre-conventional Rules and expectations are
external. - Conventional The individual internalizes the
rules and expectations of others. - Post-conventional The individual now defines
their own rules based on universal ethical
principles.
15Kohlbergs Stages (1 2)
16Kohlbergs Stages (3 4)
17Kohlbergs Stages (5 6)
18Development Through Interaction
Infant Child Adolescent
Adult
Parents Peers Community Society
19Example Stage Responses
- Q. Lets say a friend of yours needs help and may
even die, and youre the only person who can save
him or her. How important is it for a person to
save a friends life? - A. Saving your friends life is important
because - Stage 1. If you dont youll get shouted at
- Stage 2. You may need your friend one day
- Stage 3. Thats what friends are for, otherwise
your not much of a friend - Stage 4. People must help each other for the
sake of society
20Percentage Stage Usage in Child and Adolescent
Samples
21Characteristics of Kohlbergs Stages
- Invariant stage development.
- Individuals are attracted to plus-one reasoning.
- Turiel, E. Rothman, G. R. (1972). The influence
of reasoning on behavioural choices at different
stages of moral development. Child Development,
43, 741-756. - Cognitive disequilibrium causes upward stage
progression. - Linked to logical or cognitive development.
- Progress requires role-taking opportunities, or
encounters in which the individual is exposed to
moderately more advanced thought. - Linked to moral atmosphere. The society must
allow role taking opportunities for an individual
to advance through the stages.
22Kohlbergs Critics
- Culturally Universal?
- Snarney, J. (1985). The cross-cultural
universality of socio-moral development A
critical review of Kohlbergian research.
Psychological Bulletin, 97, 202-232. - The Use of Moral Dilemmas.
- Vine, I. (1986). Moral maturity in socio-cultural
perspective Are Kohlbergs stages universal? In
S. Modgil C. Modgil (Eds.), Lawrence Kohlberg
Consensus and controversy (pp. 419-430). Sussex,
England Falmer. - Justice vs. Care
- Gilligan, C. (1982). In a different voice
Psychological theory and womens development.
Cambridge, MA Harvard University Press.
23John Gibbs
- Gained his PhD from Harvard in 1971 and worked
with Kohlberg at from 1975 to 1979 as a research
faculty member at the Harvard Graduate School of
Education. - Professor of Developmental Psychology at The Ohio
State University
24Gibbs
25Progression Through Gibbs Stages
- Fuelled by continual cognitive decentration.
- Natural process utilising optimal role-taking
opportunities to evolve towards moral adequacy. - Also upward development can evolve from
encounters between same stage individuals with
opposing viewpoints.
26Global Meta-analysis
OLDER ADULT (approx. 40-50 years old) n Global
Stage USA (Basinger et al.), university parents/
(50.1) 58 3(4) USA (Peterson), offenders/
(41.7) 29 2(3) - 3 YOUNG ADULT (approx. 20-35
years old) USA (Peterson), university students/
(34.5) 20 3(4) - 4 Australia (Stevenson et
al.), university students/ (26.9) 94 3
3(4) LATE ADOLESCENT (approx. 16-19 years old)
Italy (Comunian Gielen), volunteers/ 15-21
(17.9) 49 3 3(4) England (Palmer Hollin
98), female students/ 13-22 (17.9) 210 2(3)
3(4) Australia (Putnins), male delinquents/ 14-18
(16.5) 38 1(2) 2(3) EARLY/MIDDLE ADOLESCENT
(approx.12-15 years) Japan (Takaki), 6th graders/
(12.4) 46 2(3) - 3 Ireland (Ferguson
Cairns), secondary school students/
14-15 325 2(3) 3 Kenya, middle school students/
11-13 83 1(2) 2 LATE CHILDHOOD (approx. 9-11
years old) USA (Garrod), primary school students/
11-12 (11.4) 17 2 2(3) Japan (Takaki), 4th
graders/ (10.3) 37 2 - 3 Ireland (Ferguson et
al.), primary school students/ 10-11 28 2
2(3) Nigeria, (Ferguson et al.), primary school
students/ 10-11 37 1(2) - 2
27Moral Atmosphere Effects
- Donated Social Discourse
- Emler, N. (1987). Socio-moral development from
the perspective of social representations.
Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 17,
4, 371-388. - Kibbutz
- Snarney, J., Reimer, J., Kohlberg, L. (1984).
The development of sociomoral reasoning among
Kibbutz adolescents A longitudinal
cross-cultural study. Developmental Psychology,
21, 3-17. - Prison
- Kohlberg, L., Hickey, J., Scharf (1972). The
justice of the prison A theory and intervention.
Prison Journal, 51, 3-14.
28Useful References
- Colby, A., Kohlberg, L. (1987). The Measurement
of Moral Judgment Vol. 1. Cambridge Cambridge
University Press. - Duska, R., Whelan, M. (1977). Moral
Development A Guide to Piaget and Kohlberg.
Dublin, Ireland Gill Macmillan. - Gibbs, J. C., Basinger, K. S., Fuller, D.
(1992). Moral Maturity Measuring the Development
of Sociomoral Reflection. Englewood Cliffs, NJ
Erlbaum. - Gibbs, J. C., Basinger, K., Grime, R. L.,
Snarney, J. (In Press). Moral Development and
Values across Cultures Revising Kohlbergs
Universalist Claim with a New Assessment Method.
Psychological Bulletin.