Kohleberg Flashcards

1
Q

What is morality?

A

How you believe you should treat people - sense of right and wrong.

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2
Q

What is operant conditioning?

A

Operant conditioning is learning through consequences, where if behaviour is positively rewarded it will be repeated.
- Chaney, funhaler.

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3
Q

What is classical conditioning?

A

Classical conditioning is where behaviour is learnt through association
- Pavlov’s dogs.
- Associate the bell with food so they start to salivate.

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4
Q

What is social learning theory?

A

Social learning theory is learning through association.
- Bandura, BOBO doll.

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5
Q

What is pre-conventional in the level of moral development?

A

Aged 4-10.
Good i.e.. moral behaviour is determined by avoidance of punishments and getting rewards.

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6
Q

What is conventional in the level of development?

A

Child seeks to conform to the rules of family, social group or nation and to help maintain the rules.

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7
Q

What is post-conventional in the level of development?

A

Acts according to universal principles that exit from the authority or groups that hold them.

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8
Q

What is the obedience principle and when is it?

A

Infancy.
No difference between doing the right and wrong thing and avoiding punishment.

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9
Q

What is the instrumental orientation and when is it?

A

Pre-school.
Interest shifts to rewards rather than punishment.
Effort is made to secure the greatest benefit of oneself.

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10
Q

What is the good boy/good girl principle and when is it?

A

School-age.
Effort is made to secure approval and maintain friendly relations with others.

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11
Q

What is the authority and social order principle and when is it?

A

School-age.
Orientation towards fixed rules. The purpose of morality is to maintain social order.

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12
Q

What is the social construct principle and when is it?

A

Teens.
Mutual benefit. Morally right and legally right are not the same thing.

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13
Q

What is the universal principle and when is it?

A

Adulthood.
Morality is based on principles that transcend mutual benefit.

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14
Q

What were the moral reasons?

A

Kohlberg’s approach was to emphasise how thinking changes with age.
He proposed that the six stages formed a sequence that is followed in the same order for all people.

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15
Q

What was the aim?

A

To show how as young adolescents developed into young adulthood, that they move through 6 levels of moral thinking. He also studied moral development in other cultures.

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16
Q

What method was the study?

A

A longitudinal cross cultural study.

17
Q

Why was it this method?

A

He studied the development of the same group of American (Chicago) boys for 12 years.
He also studied five other cultures.

18
Q

How was the data collected?

A

Semi-structured interviews.
Presenting children with moral dilemmas and asking them a series of questions on how the character should behave.
Some questions were altered based on the PP’s response.

19
Q

What was the IV?

A

Age

20
Q

What was the DV?

A

Stage of development

21
Q

What were the key characteristics for the sample?

A

75 PPs
American (Chicago)
Male
10-16 start of study
22-28 end of study

22
Q

Data was also collected from what other countries?

A

Great Britain
Canada
Taiwan
Mexico
Turkey

23
Q
A
24
Q

What were PPs asked to do?

A

Listen to the dilemma and then were asked a selection of closed questions.

25
Q

When were the PPs assessed?

A

PPs were assessed at either 10,13 or 16 years old.
Thereafter, each boy was tested every 3/4 years until the age of 22-28.

26
Q

How did Kohlberg assess moral reasoning?

A

Each PP level of moral development was assessed by giving them a moral dilemma such as the Heinz Dilemma. Children were a series of open questions asking to explain the reasoning behind their decision.

27
Q

How were the questions adjusted?

A

Based on previous responses.

28
Q

What would each stage of moral reasoning argue about the Heinz situation?

A
  1. Punishment orientation - not steal - don’t want to be punished.
  2. Instrumental orientation - steal - they save the wife which makes him happy.
  3. Good girl / Good boy orientation - steal ( maintain relationship with the wife) - not steal (if he steals he is a bad person).
  4. Authority orientation - not steal - the rules are to not steal, the boss was the highest authority.
  5. Social contract orientation - steal - it moral to save the wife, mutual benefit.
  6. Universal ethical principles - steal (the value of life is greater than theft) - not steal (respect of the company)
29
Q

Where did he test in rural villages?

A

Malaysia and Taiwan

30
Q

What dilemma was changed in the rural villages?

A

Taiwanese boys aged 10-13, changed the dilemma to a starving wife and stealing food.

31
Q
A