Developmental area Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the two studies in the developmental area

A

Kohlberg (1968)

Lee et al (1997)

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2
Q

What are the 6 stages on moral development and the 3 levels they come under in the Kohlberg study

A
  • Pre-conventional =
    1. Punishment
    2. Instrumental-relativist
  • Conventional =
    3. Good boy-Good girl orientation
    4. Law and order orientation
  • Post-conventional =
    5. Social contract orientation
    6. Universal principles orientation
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3
Q

What is the key theme in the Kohlberg study

A

Moral development

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4
Q

What does the punishment stage of moral development mean in the Kohlberg study and give an example

A

The child is good to avoid being punished. if person is punished they have done wrong. for example in the Heinz dilemma:
does steal = punishment is wife dying, which is worse than the punishment of stealing
doesn’t steal = Punishment for stealing is prison, which he wants to avoid

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5
Q

What does the Instrumental-relativist stage of moral development mean in the Kohlberg study and give an example

A

At this stage children recognize that there is not just one right view that is handed down by the authorities. Different individuals have different viewpoints. for example in the Heinz dilemma:
does steal = Save his wife. she makes him happy and he doesn’t want to lose her
doesn’t steal = He wont get into trouble and won’t go to prison

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6
Q

What does the Good boy-Good girl orientation stage of moral development mean in the Kohlberg study and give an example

A

The child is good if they want to be seen as being a good person by others. Therefore, answers relate to the approval of others. for example in the Heinz dilemma:
does steal = He has a duty as a husband and it is seen as a ‘good husband’ behaviour
doesn’t steal = It is against the law and majority will just see it as illegal

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7
Q

What does the Law and order orientation stage of moral development mean in the Kohlberg study and give an example

A

The child becomes aware of the wider rules of society so judgments concern obeying the rules in order to uphold the law and to avoid guilt. for example in the Heinz dilemma:
does steal = He is obeying his wife and trying to save her, marriage is more important than the law. he has also already tried the legal route
doesn’t steal = It is illegal and he cant go against the law

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8
Q

What does the Social contract orientation stage of moral development mean in the Kohlberg study and give an example

A

The child becomes aware that while rules/laws might exist for the good of the greatest number, there are times when they will work against the interest of particular individuals. for example in the Heinz dilemma:
does steal = The law doesn’t matter when saving his wife (human life)
doesn’t steal = The druggist also has human rights and has a business

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9
Q

What does the Universal principles orientation stage of moral development mean in the Kohlberg study and give an example

A

People at this stage have developed their own set of moral guidelines which may or may not fit the law. for example in the Heinz dilemma:
does steal = If his wife dies, it affects more people, the law is unfair and protects the druggist.
doesn’t steal = prison may have severe consequences and the drug can save others not just his wife

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10
Q

Give a brief description of the Heinz dilemma in the Kohlberg study

A

Heinz was trying to buy medication for his dying wife, but it was too expensive and the druggist wouldn’t let him buy it. so he had a choice to either steal the medicine and save his wife or don’t steal to and his wife would die

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11
Q

What were the aims of the Kohlberg study

A
  • To investigate of there was evidence to support his theory of moral development
  • To show how, as young adolescences develop into young manhood, they move through the distinct stages and levels of moral development
  • To assess whether this process is the same cross-culturally
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12
Q

What research methods were used in the Kohlberg study

A
Longitudinal study
cross-cultural study
self report
qualitative
primary
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13
Q

What was the sample in the Kohlberg study

A

75 young American males aged 10-16 at the start of the study and 22-28 at the end of the study
Also went to Malaysia, Taiwan, Turkey, Canada, UK, Mexico

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14
Q

How long was the Kohlberg study carried out for

A

12 years

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15
Q

Briefly describe the procedure of the Kohlberg study

A
  • Each one of the boys was, at 3 yearly intervals, presented with hypothetical moral dilemmas
  • All the dilemmas were deliberately philosophical. their answers and the reasoning behind their answers were linked to the basic moral concepts in 2 hour interviews with 10 dilemmas
  • Kohlberg wanted to judge the boys responses to see how developed their moral reasoning was
  • for example the Heinz dilemma

-The Taiwanese boys had a separate dilemma to the Heinz dilemma because of ethnocentric factors

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16
Q

What were the finding from the Kohlberg study

A
  • As the boys get older, their moral development went through the stages and never skipped a stage/ became more aware of others and developed, becomes more complex as you get older
  • Class affected development: middle class developed quicker and lower classes will develop slower
  • About 50% of the boys thinking was always in a single stage when tested
  • Not all participants progressed through to stage 6 when tested
  • Participants always progressed through the stages at the same order
  • Participants never went backwards in development they would only stop at a stage
  • Mexico and Taiwan developed slower but showed same results
  • No religious differences
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17
Q

What were the conclusions from the Kohlberg study

A
  • There is an invariable developmental sequence in an individuals moral development = each stage of moral development comes one at a time in the same order
  • Cultural universality of sequence of stages
  • Middle class and working class move through same stages just at a different rate/ middle class = faster and further
  • The only thing that is affected is the rate at which individuals progress through the sequence not social, cultural or religious
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18
Q

Internal Validity - Kohlberg

A
  • Procedure tests what it wants to test which is moral development, however Kohlberg could have been more bias and interpreted what the boys were saying in his own opinion to back-up his theory (researcher and cultural bias)
  • Are accurate for capitalist societies
19
Q

External validity - Kohlberg

Population
Ecological

A

Population

  • People with developmental disorders can not relate e.g. autism
  • Androcentric = male morality theory e.g. females driven by maternal instincts
  • Cant apply to people who lack early upbringing e.g. no parents

Ecological

  • More realistic in westernised cultures (more valid)
  • Extreme dilemmas (not valid)
20
Q

Internal reliability - Kohlberg

A
  • 2hr interviews with same 10 dilemmas and same questions asked
  • Taiwan although were not asked same dilemmas, one used stealing food instead of medication
21
Q

External reliability - Kohlberg

A
  • Still relevant to todays society in western societies
  • Money does not have the same value as when the study was done $2,000 = $20,000
  • Culture locked to capitalist societies
22
Q

How is the Kohlberg study ethnocentric

A
  • The value of money stealing and life are not culturally universal e.g. Syria have no government
  • Stealing = hands cut off in middle eastern countries/ death penalty (very westernised theory
23
Q

What are the aims of the Lee et al study

A

-To test the effects of culture on the children moral evaluations of lying truth telling by comparing the oral judgments of Canadian and Chinese children

24
Q

What method was used in the Lee et al study

A

-Snapshot study = One point in time e.g. 7 year olds, 9 year olds and 11 year olds were used but with different participants at each age group

25
Q

What experimental design was used in the Lee at al study

A
  • Cross-cultural study = taking different groups of people and comparing them
  • Independent measures
  • Quasi experiment
26
Q

What were the independent variables in the Lee at al study

A
  • Social vs Physical story = In the social story other people were directly effected and in the physical story there was no direct effect on others
  • Prosocial vs antisocial = In the Prosocial situation was helping and antisocial was disruptive acts
  • Age of the children
  • Culture of the children
27
Q

What were the dependent variables in the Lee et al study

A
  1. The rating given to the story characters deed
  2. The rating given to what the character said

Both ratings ranged from very, very good to very, very naughty

28
Q

Define morality

A

What an individual views as morally right sand wrong

29
Q

Define moral development

A

The stages an individual ages through to understand right from wrong in certain situations

30
Q

Define communism

A

Everyone is equal

31
Q

Define collectivism

A

Giving a group priority over each individual in it

32
Q

Define individualism

A

Being independent and self-reliant. priority over group

33
Q

Define pro-social behaviour

A

Actions intended to help others with no exception of reward

34
Q

Define antisocial behaviour

A

Disruptive acts, intentional aggression towards others

35
Q

What was the sample in the Lee et al study

A

120 Chinese children were used:
equal number of 7,9 and 11 year olds
half of the children were boys and half girls

108 Canadian Children were used:
7 yr olds = 36
9yr olds = 40
11 yr olds = 32
58 were boys and 50 were girls

All the participants from each culture were from urban cities

36
Q

What sampling method was used in the Lee et al study

A

Opportunity sampling

37
Q

Briefly describe the procedure of the Lee et al study

A
  • The children were read 4 scenarios with illustration, 2 of them were Prosocial and 2 of them were antisocial (one truth telling and one lie telling)
  • The children were tested individually and the meaning of the words and symbols were explained to them and were repeated every time a question was asked
  • Ratings of the ‘deeds’ and statements were on a 7 point rating chart: 3 red stars = very, very good, blue circle = Neutral and 3 black crosses = very, very naughty
  • As a way of counterbalancing the words good and naughty in the questions were alternated, as were the orders of the stories to reduce order effects
38
Q

What were some of the findings from the Lee et al study

A

=Prosocial/Truth telling - Children from both cultures rated Prosocial behaviours similarly

  • Canadian children had a similar rating at each age
  • Chinese children’s ratings became less positive with age

=Prosocial/Lie telling - Canadian children rated lie telling negatively by as age increased, ratings became less negative
- Chinese children’s ratings went from negative to positive as age increased

=Antisocial/Truth telling - Children from both cultures rated truth telling in this situation very positively

=Antisocial/Lie telling - Both cultures rated lie telling negatively in this situation

  • Chinese 7 year olds rated lie telling less negatively than older children in the physical story
  • Canadian 7 year olds rated lie telling less negatively than older children in the social story
39
Q

What were some of the conclusions from the Lee et al study

A
  • There is a close relationship between socio-cultural practices and moral judgment
  • Specific social and cultural norms have an impact on children’s developing moral judgments, which are modified by age and experience within a culture
  • Chinese children rate truth telling in Prosocial situations less positively and lie telling in the same situations less negatively than Canadian children
  • Moral development is affected by the culture and environment in which individuals are socialised
40
Q

Internal validity - Lee at al

A

-Reduce extraneous variables and increase internal validity by counterbalancing ‘good-naughty’ to reduce order effects, matching age and gender and randomly allocating participants to groups

41
Q

External validity - Lee at al

Population
Ecological

A

Population
+Large number of sample 120 and 108, this increases validity because it makes the results more accurate due to a clear pattern in results
-Only from one area, making it ethnocentric
-Not much difference between 7,9,11 and could be a wider age range

Ecological
+May have to make decisions on whether good or bad situation for punishment or neutral
-Very artificial situation as they wouldn’t read about this situation in real life

42
Q

Internal reliability - Lee et al

A
  • Standardised procedure and same scenarios make the study easy to replicate
  • 4 stories allowed Lee to see consistent responses are given in each of the different stories
43
Q

External reliability - Lee et al

A

-The stories may not apply to everyone e.g. money may not be a problem for everyone and therefore could possibly be culture-locked