G - Kohlberg's theory Flashcards
Conservation
Refers to the ability to understand that, despite superficial changes in appearance, basic properties of an object remain unchanged. This ability appears around the age of 6 or 7.
Gender consistency
The recognition that your gender is a constant, not just across your lifetime but also in different situations. Young children, according to Kohlberg, believe that gender may vary from time to time and depending on, for example, the clothes a person wears.
Pre-operational
A stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development where a child’s logic lacks internal consistency, for example, a child might believe that trees make wind because the branches wave about. There is some logic to this, but it doesn’t explain how you still get wind when there are no trees.
When did Kohlberg come up with his theory of gender development?
1966
What type of explanation is Kohlberg’s theory?
Cognitive explanation.
What does Kohlberg’s theory emphasise?
The role of thinking (cognition) in the process of development.
What did Kohlberg also use his theory to explain?
Gender/Moral development.
What did Kohlberg say the stages of moral development were?
Stage 1: Preconventional - Obedience and punishment. - Individualism and exchange. Stage 2: Conventional - Interpersonal relationships. - Authority and social order. Stage 3: Post-conventional - Social contact. - Universal principles.
What behaviours are associated with the preconventional stage of moral development?
The ‘right’. Based on avoiding punishment, focused on consequences rather than intention.
What behaviours are associated with the conventional stage of moral development?
Individuals filling social roles. Social obedience for a functional society.
What behaviours are associated with the postconventional stage of moral development?
Begin to learn other have different values. Internal moral principles.
What are Piaget’s periods of development?
Birth - 2 years = sensorimotor.
2 - 6 years = pre-operational.
7 - 11 years = concrete operational.
12 years - adulthood = formal operational.
What happens in Piaget’s sensorimotor period of development?
Uses senses and motor skills, items known by use.
Object performance learned (there when not visible).
What happens in Piaget’s pre-operational period of development?
Symbolic thinking, language used; egocentric thinking.
Imagination/experience grow, child de-centers (understands others are conscious).
What happens in Piaget’s concrete operational period of development?
Logic applied, has objective/rational interpretations.
Conservation (different situations don’t change gender), numbers, ideas, classificiations.