Lee: Moral Development (Developmental) Flashcards

1
Q

What research had been does prior to Lee’s study?

A

-Kohlberg conducted cross cultural research to support his theory of moral development, but did not specifically focus on the art of lying
-Children’s moral judgements about lying and truth telling primarily rely on the extent to which a verbal statement differs from factudality and whether or not the lie is punished
-Piaget believed children begin to use the protagonist’s intention as the key factor of their moral development from the age of 11, others believe that it is earlier

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2
Q

What was the background to Lee’s study?

A

-Despite advances in research, understanding of the development of children’s moral development of lying is still restricted
-Almost all previous research was conducted in Western countries, where children were raised in industrial environments that emphasised individualism, self assertion/promotion, and competition

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3
Q

What was the aim of Lee’s study?

A

To compare cross cultural evaluations of lying and truth telling situations involving prosocial and antisocial behaviours.

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4
Q

What was the research method in Lee’s study?

A

Lab experiment using an independent measures design

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5
Q

What were the variables in Lee’s study?

A

4 conditions of the IV: Prosocial Behaviour/Truth-Telling stories, Prosocial Behaviour/Lie-Telling stories, Antisocial Behaviour/Truth-
Telling stories, Antisocial Behaviour/Lie-Telling stories (participant read all 4)
Another condition of the IV: whether the participant heard the social story or the physical story
DV: rating given to the character’s deed (between very, very good and very, very naughty) and the rating given to what the character said (verbal statement with the same range)

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6
Q

What was the sample in Lee’s study?

A
  • 120 Chinese children: 40 7-year-olds, 40 9-year-olds, and 40 11-year-olds. Recruited from elementary schools in a medium sized city in China
    -108 Canadian children: 36 7-year-olds, 40 9-year-olds, and 32 11-year-olds. They were recruited from elementary schools in Canada in a province much smaller than the Chinese one.
    -Socio-economic status of Chinese children not known, most Canadian children were from middle class families
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7
Q

What was the procedure for Lee’s study?

A

-Participants were read four scenarios accompanied by illustrations, 2 prosocial, 2 anti social. All were either physical or social depending on which condition the child was in
-Each participant was tested individually
-Participants were instructed on the meanings of the 7 point rating scale with stars and crosses
-The story’s deed section was read first and then they would indicate their rating either verbally, non verbally, or both on the rating chart
-They were read the second section and gave their answer in the same way
-The words good and naughty were altered within subjects
-In each condition, half the participants read the stories in one order and the other half in the other order
-Participants involved in post experimental discussions

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8
Q

What were the key findings from Lee’s study?

A

-No significant difference in similarly negative ratings of lying in antisocial situations and positive ratings or truth telling in those stories between Canadian and Chinese children
-Chinese children tended to rate truth telling less positively than their Canadian counterparts in truth telling and lying in prosocial situations
-Chinese children rated lying in prosocial situations significantly more positively than Canadian children
-As age increased, Chinese children rated lying increasingly more positively in prosocial situations
-70% of Chinese 11 year olds rated lying positively in prosocial stories, compared to just 25% of Chinese 7 year olds.

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9
Q

What conclusions can be drawn from Lee’s study?

A

-There is a close relationship between socio cultural practices and moral judgements in terms of lying and truth telling
-Social and cultural norms have an impact on children’s developing moral judgements, which in turn, are modified by age and experience
-Chinese children rate truth telling in prosocial situations less positively and lie telling in the same situations less negatively than Canadian children
-Both Chinese and Canadian children show similar moral evaluations of lie telling and truth telling related to antisocial behaviour
-The emphasis on self effacement and modesty in Chinese culture increasingly exerts its impact on children’s moral development

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10
Q

What are the strengths and weaknesses of the research method used in Lee’s study?

A
  • Quasi experiment so can’t establish cause and effect
    -Cross cultural - good for representativeness and to show that some behaviours are universal
    -However, the task may not be interpreted in the same way by all cultures
    -Children may not be used to 1 on 1 interviews, leading to demand characteristics
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11
Q

What are the strengths and weaknesses of the types of data collected in Lee’s study?

A
  • Quantitative data by giving children a seven point rating scale. The 3 stars were allocated the value +3 and the 3 crosses were allocated the value -3.
  • Can be tested for significance and some results were found to be significant at 1%
  • Qualitative data by asking the children for their reasoning
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12
Q

What ethical considerations are there for Lee’s study?

A
  • Unequal number of children from the 2 cultures could reflect at least some Canadian parents exercising their right to withdraw
    -Very ethical - consent likely given and no harm caused
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13
Q

What is the validity like in Lee’s study?

A
  • Same age and gender mix as far as possible in the two groups, reducing participant variables as well as selecting participants from non-heavy industry cities.
  • Linguistic translations may not have the same meaning making it an extraneous variable and reducing internal validity
  • Counterbalancing controlled for order effects
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14
Q

What was the reliability like in Lee’s study?

A
  • Standardised procedure meaning it could easily be replicated by other researchers
  • Reasonably large number of children in each condition, it is likely the sample was large enough to establish consistent effect
  • 4 stories read to the child so a consistent settled viewpoint could be ensured
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15
Q

Was there any sampling bias in Lee’s study?

A
  • Children were form similar backgrounds (cities were provincial capitals)
    -large enough numbers of each age group
    -Relatively even gender split
    -Fewer children in the Canadian sample than the Chinese sample
    -All from urban areas so results may not be generalisable to rural areas
    -Misses out other continents completely
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16
Q

Can Lee’s study be considered ethnocentric?

A
  • Cross cultural study so it is trying to avoid ethnocentrism
  • Questions may have been perceived differently in different cultures
  • Canada doesn’t necessarily represent all Western countries and China all Eastern countries
17
Q

What is a practical application of Lee’s study?

A

Shows that moral development is influenced by cultural norms of the society in which we live - contradicting Kohlberg’s study that found that moral development is universal