Kohlberg Flashcards

1
Q

Background (Piaget’s Theory)

A
  • Heteronomous Moral Reasoning - Weighs the outcome to determine how bad the action is
  • Autonomous Moral Reasoning - Takes into account the intent of the person committing the action
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2
Q

Aim

A

Kohlberg wanted to provide research that would back up his theory of moral development inspired by Piaget

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3
Q

USA Sample

A

75 boys aged 10-16 until they were 22-28 (same boys followed over 12 years)

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4
Q

Procedure

A
  1. Each boy presented with moral dilemmas every 3 years
  2. Using their answers, Kohlberg ranked each in 6 categories (1 = Least morally developed, 6 = Most developed) based on whether at least 50% of their responses fell into this category
  3. This formed his theory of stages of moral development
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5
Q

Other Samples

A

Study repeated on boys in Taiwan, Turkey, Malaysia, Mexico, Canada and the UK

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6
Q

Levels of Morality

A
  1. Pre-Conventional (Stages 1 & 2)
  2. Conventional (Stages 3 & 4)
  3. Post-Conventional (Stages 5 & 6)
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7
Q

Stages of Morality

A
  1. Obedience and punishment orientation - Responsive to cultural norms but able to behave in an immoral way if authority structure is missing
  2. Self-interest orientation - Behaves in a self - centred way
  3. Conformity to expectations and rules ‘good boy good girl’ - Now seeking approval from others and begins to consider the intention of the act
  4. Authority and social order orientation - Sees right behaviour as duty to show respect and maintain social order
  5. Social contract orientation - Now does what is right based on law plus personal values and opinions. Sees laws as changeable
  6. Universal ethical principles - Now bases judgement on universal human rights of justice, equality, reciprocity and respect for the individual
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8
Q

Ethical Guidelines kept

A
  • Consent was gained by the boys every 3 years
  • Had the right to withdraw every 3 years by not answering questions
  • The names of participants were left confidential
  • Participants knew the true aim of the study and there was no deception
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9
Q

Ethical Guidelines broken

A
  • Harm may have been experienced through being given troubling dilemmas
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10
Q

Reliability

A
  • Internal Reliability
    • Procedure was very standardised (e.g same dilemmas being given every 3 years)
    • Standardised by ensuring 50% of answers must fit in a stage to deem the boy in that stage
  • External Reliability
    • 75 is quite a large sample size so able to establish a consistent effect
    • Further samples within the other countries
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11
Q

Validity

A
  • Internal/Construct
    • Possible social desirability bias
    • Possible demand characteristics
    • Extraneous variables (education, upbringing etc)
    • The dilemmas may have instead been testing intelligence
  • Population
    • Wide range of cultures used so generalisable to other places
    • Only male participants used
  • Ecological
    • How you respond to a hypothetical dilemma may not be how you respond if you actually were in the scenario
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12
Q

Ethnocentrism

A
  • Kohlberg was accused of cultural bias as assumed moral development would be the same for everyone based just off the US sample.
  • He did however repeat the study in several other places (Taiwan, Turkey, Mexico, Malaysia, Canada and UK) and found similar results.
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