Aggression, Altruism, and Moral Development: Dr. Lin Dan
Aggression, Altruism, and Moral Development: Dr. Lin Dan
Aggression, Altruism, and Moral Development: Dr. Lin Dan
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Aggression
Aggression
Anyform of behavior intended to injure or
harm a living being who is motivated to
avoid such treatment
Hostile aggression goal is to harm a victim
Instrumental aggression harming another is a
more common
THE DEVELOPMENT OF AGGRESSION
Sex Differences
By 2 - 3, males more physically and verbally
aggressive than females
Due to rougher play with parents
More negative parental reaction to aggressive
behaviors of daughters
Gender-typing of toys
DodgesSocial Information-Processing
Theory of Aggression
Encoding social cues
Interpretation of social cues
Selects response
Enacts response
Figure 14.2 Dodges social information-processing model of the steps children take when deciding how to
respond to harmdoing or other social problems. The boy whose creation is destroyed by another boys nudging
the table must first encode and interpret the social cues (i.e., did he mean it or was it accidental?) and then
proceed through the remaining steps to formulate a response to this harmdoing. ADAPTED FROM CRICK &
DODGE, 1994; LEMERISE & ARSENIO, 2000.
Reactive aggressors are likely to develop a
hostile attribution bias
Proactive aggressors plan an aggressive
scarce resources
Eliminating the Payoffs for Aggression
Teach that aggression does not result in
desired outcome
Incompatible-response technique
Ignore aggressive behaviors eliminates reward of
attention
Time out technique
increases compassion.
ALTRUISM: DEVELOPMENT OF THE
PROSOCIAL SELF
sympathy
Age Trends in the Empathy-Altruism
Relationship
Little relationship between empathy and altruism
among preschool and young grade school children
Stronger for older individuals (7-9)
a person in distress
Who Raises Altruistic Children?
Altruistic
parents
Parents who discipline children in ways
that encourage children to accept personal
responsibility for the harm they caused
Urge a helpful response to the victim
Meaning of Morality
Morality
Distinguish right from wrong
Act on that distinction
Experience pride in virtuous conduct; shame
over acts that violate standards
Internalization of standards is vital
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Table 14.2 Six Dimensions of Character That Define Moral Maturity for Canadian
Adults. SOURCE: Walker & Pitts, 1998.
Moral development
How Developmentalists Look at Morality
Affective component emotional; stressed by
psychoanalytic theorists
Cognitive component reasoning; stressed
by cognitive-developmental theorists
Behavioral component stressed by social
learning and social information-processing
theorists
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Development of Moral Reasoning
Piagets theory
3 stages
Pre-moral
Heteronomous
Autonomous
Kohlbergs theory
3 levels 6 stages
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Piagets theory of moral
development
Whos naughtier?
John is helping his mother set the table for dinner. She asks him
to go get some extra napkins. John pushes open the door to the
kitchen and accidentally breaks 15 cups that were on a cart
behind the kitchen door.
Once there was a little boy named Henry. One day when his
mother was out, he tried to reach for some jam out of the
cupboard. He climbed onto a chair and stretched out his arm. But
the jam was too high up and he couldnt reach it. . . .While he was
trying to get it, he knocked over a cup. The cup fell down and
broke.
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Premoral (< 5 years)
No consistent response; cannot explain
answers
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Heteronomous (about 5-10 years)
Focuson outcome: Johns naughtier.
Unquestioning respect of authority
Unchangeable rules (moral realism)
Immanent justice
Breaking rule leads to punishment one way or another
Expiatory punishment
Punishment good for its own sake
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Autonomous (about 10 years ~)
Intentions are important: Henry is naughtier.
Rules are social constructions (moral relativism)
Punishment
Fits the transgression
Teaches a lesson
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Criticisms of Piagets work
Underestimation of young children
Turiel: Preschoolers understanding of
convention vs. morality
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Kohlbergs theory of moral development
Kohlbergs Heinz Dilemma
In Europe, a woman was near death from a special kind of cancer.
There was one drug that the doctor thought might save her. It was a
form of radium that a druggist in the same town had recently
discovered. The drug was expensive to make, but the druggist was
charging 10 times what the drug cost him to make. He paid $200 for
the radium and charged $2,000 for a small dose of the drug. The sick
womans husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to borrow the
money, but he could only get together about $1,000, which is half of
what it cost. He told the druggist that his wife was dying and asked
him to sell it cheaper or let him pay later. But the druggist said, No, I
discovered the drug and Im going to make money from it. So Heinz
gets desperate and considers breaking into the mans store to steal
the drug for his wife. (Colby, Kohlberg, Gibbs, & Liberman, 1983, p.
77)
Should Heinz have done that? Why? Why not?
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Kohlbergs Level 1: Preconventional Reasoning
Lowest level.
No internalization of moral values.
Controlled by external rewards and punishments.
Stage 1. Heteronomous morality
Moral thinking is often tied to punishment.
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Kohlbergs Level 2: Conventional Reasoning
Internalization is intermediate.
Individuals abide by certain standards (internal), but they
are the standards of others (external), such as parents or
the laws of society.
Stage 3. Mutual interpersonal expectations,
relationships, and interpersonal conformity
Individuals value trust, caring, and loyalty to others.
Children often adopt their parents moral standards.
Stage 4. Social systems morality
Understanding the social order, law, justice, and duty.
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Kohlbergs Level 3: Postconventional Reasoning
The highest level.
Morality is completely internalized and is not based on
others standards.
Personal moral code.
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Moral Reasoning at Kohlbergs Stages in Response to the Heinz and the Druggist Story
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Age and the Percentage of Individuals at Each Kohlberg Stage
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Criticisms of Kohlbergs work
Responses difficult to code
Few people reach higher stages
Associated with educational level
Biased conception of morality?
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Why Is Kohlbergs Theory Important for Understanding
Moral Development?
It tells the developmental story of people trying to understand
things like society, rules and roles, and institutions and
relationships.
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Contexts of Moral Development
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Contexts of Moral Development
Schools
The Hidden Curriculum
Conveyed by the moral atmosphere that is a part of every
school.
Character Education
Teaching students a basic moral literacy to prevent them
from engaging in immoral behavior and doing harm to
themselves or others (Arthur, 2008; Carr, 2008).
Values Clarification
Helping people to clarify what is important to them, what is
worth working for, and what purpose their lives are to serve.
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Contexts of Moral Development
Schools
Cognitive Moral Education
A concept based on the belief that students should
learn to value things like democracy and justice as
their moral reasoning develops.
Service Learning
A form of education that promotes social responsibility
and service to the community.
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