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Peer reviewedKamii, Constance – Young Children, 1984
Points out adult behaviors likely to help children develop responsibility. Discussion focuses on the inadvisability of using reward and punishment, the importance of exchanging viewpoints with children and letting them make decisions, and the importance of beginning training for autonomy in the early years. (RH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Moral Development, Parent Influence
Peer reviewedGoldman, Louis – Educational Leadership, 1984
Argues that the Socratic method is inappropriate for children because it teaches them to question adult authority before they have the necessary experience and is therefore conducive to cynicism. A traditional liberal arts curriculum, combining transmission of culture with open inquiry, is preferable to attempts to teach critical thinking. (TE)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education, Inquiry, Intellectual Development
Peer reviewedGoldman, Louis – Educational Leadership, 1984
Answering Richard Paul's critique, the author restates his preference for open dialog in the school about beliefs and issues, rather than excessive concern with techniques of critical thinking. Children learn worthwhile things without being directly taught, while an unintended consequence of teaching critical thinking may be a weakening of…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Critical Thinking, Democratic Values, Educational Principles
Peer reviewedMosher, Ralph A.; Sullivan, Paul R. – Journal of Moral Education, 1976
The need for a new role for guidance in secondary schools is stressed. Guidance through the curriculum is presented as a means of stimulating cognitive, moral and ego development by secondary school pupils. An experimental curriculum in moral education is described and evaluated. (Editor)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Course Descriptions, Educational Problems, Experimental Curriculum
Peer reviewedOhlde, Carroll D.; Vinitsky, Michael H. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1976
Effects of self-esteem and values-clarification strategies on value awareness were assessed in an hour values-clarification workshop. Subjects participating in the workshop showed significantly greater gains in value awareness than nonparticipants, confirming that values-clarification strategies are valid means for clarifying personal values of…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Moral Values, Research Projects, Self Concept
Peer reviewedUgwuegbu, Denis Chimaeze E. – Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1976
This study examines the effects of three levels of motives (avoid failure, nonspecific, and gain) and two levels of consequences (individual versus collective) on attribution of moral responsibility. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Attribution Theory, College Students, Emotional Response
Peer reviewedFenton, Edwin – Social Education, 1977
Responses to Fraenkel's 15 criticisms of the author's article about Kohlberg's cognitive-developmental approach to moral education in the April 1976 issue of "Social Education." Three circumstances are stated as reasons for the differences between the two men: (1) staying up-to-date with research and publications, (2) time consumed in refuting…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Elementary Secondary Education, Moral Development
Peer reviewedFraenkel, Jack R. – Social Education, 1977
Restatement of the author's criticisms of Fenton's article about Kohlberg's cognitive-developmental approach to moral education in the April 1976 issue of "Social Education." Emphasis is made that (1) Fenton's definitive summations of Kohlberg's works should be more tentative and cautious, because (2) some parts of moral developmental research are…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Elementary Secondary Education, Moral Development
Temple, Eric – 1996
This paper offers suggestions for structural changes needed in the classroom to develop the moral side of students' lives. Curriculum designs often do not translate into moral behavior. A more systemic and philosophically pedagogical interest in moral development must begin to pervade classrooms in order to make them places where student ethical…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Ethics
DiGiacomo, James J. – 2000
For moral education to be effective, it must take into account the cultural, philosophical, and religious factors that influence moral development. The way growing children think and feel about right and wrong depends to a great extent on society's dominant culture, as expressed through mass communication media. These media promote values,…
Descriptors: Catholics, Cultural Context, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education
Tirri, Kirsi; Pehkonen, Leila – 2000
This study explored the moral reasoning and scientific argumentation skills of 31 gifted Finnish adolescents participating in a science program at the University of Helsinki. Students were given the Defining Issues Test (DIT) to determine their level of moral reasoning and the Raven test to evaluate their scientific reasoning. The argumentation…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Academically Gifted, Adolescents, Case Studies
Feldman, Jay – 2001
Lawrence Kohlberg believed children needed to be in an environment that allowed for open and public discussion of day-to-day conflicts and problems to develop their moral reasoning ability. This study examined moral discourse, reflection, and development in a school community with a process similar to that described by Kohlberg. Data were drawn…
Descriptors: Discourse Communities, Educational Environment, Educational Research, Ethnography
Shail, Linda G. – 2002
The character traits children assimilate during their growing-up years will determine how they behave, how they see themselves, how they treat others, and the type of adults they will become. Children who develop character built on honesty, respect, diligence, and self control will be better able to handle the frustrations and disappointments of…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Class Activities, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Learning Activities
Lampkin, Patricia M.; Gibson, Elizabeth M. – 1999
This book uses the analogy of three mountains on the horizon that must be traveled in order to explore ethics in relation to student affairs. It contends there are three major approaches to ethics that represent three major approaches to the moral life: (1) principles-based; (2) case-based; and (3) virtues-based. In order to facilitate a person's…
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Administration, College Students, Ethics
Peer reviewedStanton, Michael – Journal of Moral Education, 1974
This study, which attempts to evaluate the assessment of various forms of social behavior by teachers and college students, is an extension of an earlier investigation (Stanton 1973). (Author)
Descriptors: Expectation, Methods, Moral Development, Personality Assessment


