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Lawrence Kohlberg. The Stages of Moral Development. By: Clare Elfelt and Erin Moore. Background I nformation. Lawrence Kohlberg was born in 1927 Received Bachelor’s Degree and PhD in Psychology Taught at Yale, the University of Chicago, and Harvard
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Lawrence Kohlberg The Stages of Moral Development By: Clare Elfelt and Erin Moore
Background Information • Lawrence Kohlberg was born in 1927 • Received Bachelor’s Degree and PhD in Psychology • Taught at Yale, the University of Chicago, and Harvard • Expanded on Piaget’s theories of Cognitive Development • Made significant discoveries within the field of Moral Development • Kohlberg died in 1971
Definition of Terms • Moral Reasoning – the process of determining right or wrong in a given situation • Moral Dilemma - fictional stories that describe situations in which a person has to make a moral decision • Values – the rules by which we make decisions about right and wrong • Choice – An act of selecting or making a decision when faced with two or more possibilities
The Cognitive-Developmental Theory of Moralization • Pre-Conventional Morality • Stage 1: Obedience Orientation • Stage 2: Individualism Orientation • Conventional Morality • Stage 3: Interpersonal Orientation • Stage 4: Social Order Orientation • Post-Conventional Morality • Stage 5: Social Contract Orientation • Stage 6: Universal Ethics Orientation
Stage 1: Obedience • The child assumes that the rules of the authority figure must be unquestioned • View morality as external to themselves • Example of reasoning: “It’s bad to steal”
Stage 2: Individualism • Act according to ones own self-interest • Speak as isolated individuals instead of reasoning members of society • Example of reasoning: “Stealing is okay if you need something”
Stage 3: Interpersonal • Best observed in two-person relationships • Emphasis on living up to social expectations • Example of reasoning: “He was a good man because he didn’t steal”
Stage 4: Social Order • Make observations in relation to society as a whole • Focus on maintaining law and order • Example of reasoning: “It’s against the law to steal”
Stage 5: Social Contract • Understand that there are differing of opinion of what is right and wrong • Need for rights and democracy • Example of reasoning: “It is legally wrong to steal but it in this case it is morally right”
Stage 6: Universal Ethics • Ability to engage in abstract reasoning • Protection of individual rights and disputes settled through the democratic process • Kohlberg believed this stage to be theoretical in nature
Our Research Questions • Are Catholic students attending a Catholic school more likely to rely on traditional church teachings when responding to a moral dilemma that involves a specifically Catholic teaching than when responding to a moral dilemma that involves a generic/universal moral question? • When evaluated using The Measurement of Moral Judgment: Volume 2, Standard Issue Scoring Manual by Colby and Kohlberg, will Catholic student responses to Catholic moral dilemmas fall into the same, higher, or lower stages of moral development as compared to the responses of the non-Catholic students? • Are there patterns of difference among boys and girls with respect to their stages of moral reasoning relevant to gender or religion?
Our Hypotheses • Catholic students attending a Catholic school will be more likely to rely on traditional church teachings when responding to a moral dilemma that involves a specifically Catholic teaching than when responding to a moral dilemma that involves a generic/universal moral question. • When evaluated using The Measurement of Moral Judgment: Volume 2, Standard Issue Scoring Manual by Colby and Kohlberg, Catholic students responses to Catholic moral dilemmas will fall into higher stages of moral development as compared to the responses of the non-Catholic students. • There will not be patterns of difference among boys and girls with respect to their stages of moral reasoning relevant to gender or religion.
Data Collection Instrument Part 1 Are you Catholic? Circle yes or no. Yes or No How old are you? __________ What is your gender? Circle your answer. Male or Female Part 2 Joe is a 14-year old boy who wanted to go to camp very much. His father promised him he could go if he saved up the money for it himself. So Joe worked hard at his paper route and saved up the $100 it cost to go to camp and a little more besides. But just before camp was going to start, his father changed his mind. Some of his friends decided to go on a special fishing trip, and Joe’s father was short of the money it would cost. So he told Joe to give him the money he had saved from the paper route. Joe didn’t want to give up going to camp, so he thought about refusing to give his father the money. Should Joe refuse to give his father the money? Why or why not? Use the space below to write your answer. Part 3 Theresa is a really talented soccer player. All season, Theresa has worked really hard to make sure that her middle school soccer team made it to the finals. The hard work paid off and Theresa’s team won every single game. The finals schedule was posted online and Theresa saw that the championship game was scheduled for a Sunday. There was going to be a scout at that Sunday’s game and Theresa had a chance to get a soccer scholarship to the best high school in her town. The Catechism tells us “The Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and confirmation of all Christian practice. For this reason the faithful are obliged to participate in the Eucharist on days of obligation, unless excused for a serious reason” (2181, Catechism of the Catholic Church). Theresa thinks her soccer championship is a serious reason. Should Theresa miss mass to play in championship game? Why or why not? Use the space below to write your answer.
Interesting Responses • “No she should go to mass because it’s one of the commandments and you need to abide by them.” – Child A • “She should miss mass because going to the championship is a once in a lifetime opportunity and her team is counting on her. You can go to mass every Sunday and it is okay to skip at least one mass.” - Child D • “She shouldn’t miss her game because she worked really hard. There are a lot of masses on Sunday and she could just go to a later mass.” –Child E
Conclusion • Only two students exhibited a change in moral reasoning • The majority of students exhibited Stage 2 reasoning in both dilemmas • One of our hypotheses was correct: • The girl participant did not exhibit different reasoning than the male participants • Two of our hypotheses were incorrect: • Catholic students on the whole did not exhibit a change in moral reasoning • Catholic students did not exhibit higher reasoning than Non-Catholic students on the Catholic Dilemma
Limitations • Limited amount of survey subjects • There was only one female participant in the study • There was only Non-Catholic participant in the study • Survey participants were distracted by their classmates • Survey participation was limited to students in the 7th grade • Use of only two dilemmas provided limited information • The Catholic Dilemma should have clarified that Theresa’s parish does not offer a vigil mass • Students did not choose to attend a Catholic school
Placement on the Nature/Nurture Line Nature Nurture • Important Things to Consider: • ”Social experiences can challenge a child’s ideas, motivating them to come up with new ones.” • “Stage structures and sequences do not simply unfold according to a genetic blueprint.” • Stages unfold in an invariant sequence and have cross-cultural universality.