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PIAGET AND KOHLBERG Maeve Hogan
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JEAN PIAGET Born in Switzerland on August 9, 1896 By the time he reached his teenage years his writing was being widely published Received his Ph. D. in natural sciences in 1918 Studied under other famous psychologists such as Carl Jung and Paul Bleuler Married in 1923 and eventually had 3 children Worked under Alfred Binet in Paris, analyzing the intelligence levels of children Received the Erasmus prize in 1972 and the Balzan prize in 1978 Died at the age of 84 on September 16, 1980
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STAGE THEORY Periods of development 1. Sensorimotor Intelligence (birth-2 years) 2.Preoperational Thought (2-7 years) 3. Concrete Operations (7-11 years) 4. Formal Operations (11-adulthood) Invariant Qualitatively different periods General characteristics, or patterns of thought Hierarchic integrations Stages unfold in the same sequence in all cultures—culturally universal
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CONSERVATION Conservation of Continuous Quantities (Liquids) Pre-operational level: two possible results Concrete Operations: able to conserve; three arguments Identity Compensation Inversion Logical operations Spontaneous mastery and internal contradiction Also conducted experiments with conservation of number; arguments for conservation remain the same
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LAWRENCE KOHLBERG Born on October 25, 1927 in Bronxville, New York Joined the merchant marines at the end of WWII Graduated from the University of Chicago in 1948 Influenced heavily by the work of Jean Piaget 1958-1961 he served as an assistant professor of psychology at Yale University In 1968 he was names Professor of Education and Social Psychology at Harvard University Died in 1987 from what was rumored to be a suicide after suffering from depression for many years
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STAGES OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT Level 1: Pre-conventional Morality Stage 1: Obedience and Punishment Orientation Stage 2: Individualism and Exchange Conventional Morality Stage 3: Good Interpersonal Relationships Stage 4: Maintaining the Social Order Post-Conventional Morality Stage 5: Social Contract and Individual Rights Stage 6: Universal Principles
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MY RESEARCH STUDY Purpose: to investigate whether the level of moral reasoning as determined by one of Kohlberg’s dilemmas is indicative of the level of conservation achievement as determined by performances on specified Piagetian conservation tasks. In particular, this research study seeks to answer the following questions: (1) Do conserving children achieve a higher stage of moral reasoning than non-conserving children as indicated on Kohlberg’s stage theory of moral development? (2) Do children who can conserve volume achieve a higher stage of moral reasoning than children who can only conserve number as indicated on Kohlberg’s stage theory of moral reasoning? (3) Are there patterns of difference among conserving boys and conserving girls with respect to their stages of moral reasoning?
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HYPOTHESES Hypothesis 1: Conserving children will achieve a higher stage of moral reasoning than non-conserving children as indicated on Kohlberg’s stage theory of moral development Hypothesis 2: Children who can conserve volume will achieve a higher stage of moral reasoning than children who can only conserve number as indicated on Kohlberg’s stage theory of moral reasoning Hypothesis 3: There will be patterns of difference among conserving boys and conserving girls with respect to their stages of moral reasoning
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METHODOLOGY Participants: convenience sample of 8 children from Holy Family Elementary school 4 children from 2 nd grade (2 girls, 2 boys) 4 children from 8 th grade (2 girls, 2 boys) Setting: Holy Family classroom Procedure: Look at groups of pennies lined up on a desk and then answer questions about which group has more pennies. Look at water poured into different cups and then answer questions about which of the cups has more water. Listen to a story and then answer questions explaining whether you think a character in the story made the right or wrong choice – and why.
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DILEMMA As presented in Kohlberg’s dissertation (p 361) Joe is a fourteen-year-old boy who wanted to go to camp very much. His father promised him he could go if he saved up the money for it himself. So Joe worked hard at his paper route and saved up the forty dollars it cost to go to camp, and a little more besides that. But just before camp was going to start, his father changed his mind. Some of his father’s friends decided to go on a special fishing trip, and Joe's father was short of the money it would cost. So he told Joe to give him the money he had saved from the paper route. Joe didn't want to give up going to camp, so he thinks of refusing to give his father the money. Should Joe give his father the money?
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CONSERVATION OF NUMBER The coin test
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CONSERVATION OF LIQUID
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ASSESSMENT StageCharacteristics 1 Obedience and Punishment Orientation Not much explanation; concerned with authority 2 Individualism and ExchangeMention of different perspective or how to coordinate beneficial deals 3 Good Interpersonal RelationshipsTalk about living up to expectations or underlying motives 4 Maintaining the Social OrderFocuses on respecting authority, must have a reason behind it 5 Social Contract and Individual RightsEmphasis on basic rights and ways to benefit everyone 6 Universal PrinciplesDefine principles by which agreements will be most just
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RESULTS Participant 1: Male, 2 nd Grade Dilemma: Yes Joe should give his dad the money Reason: because it is what you are supposed to do, you are supposed to say no to bad things and yes to good Stage: 1. Obedience and Punishment Conservation of number: unable to conserve Conservation of liquid: unable to conserve
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RESULTS Participant 2: Female, 2 nd Grade Dilemma: Yes Joe should give his dad the money Reason: because he is just a kid and he shouldn’t have all the things he wants to do Stage: 1. Obedience and Punishment Conservation of number: unable to conserve Conservation of liquid: unable to conserve
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RESULTS Participant 3: Female, 2 nd Grade Dilemma: Yes Joe should give his dad the money Reason: it is a good decision because it is the right thing to do Stage: 1. Obedience and Punishment Conservation of number: unable to conserve Conservation of liquid: unable to conserve
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RESULTS Participant 4: Male, 2 nd Grade Dilemma: Yes Joe should give his dad the money Reason: because his father is the boss of him and she shouldn’t tell his father no Stage: 1. Obedience and Punishment Conservation of number: unable to conserve Conservation of liquid: unable to conserve at first but then shows confusion; “the glass has more, wait actually no, because that one and that one were the same at one time, its just a different container”
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RESULTS Participant 5: Male, 8 th grade Dilemma: Yes Joe should give his dad the money Reason: His father has given Joe much more than the amount of money his dad wants Stage: 4. Maintaining Social Order Conservation of number: able to conserve Conservation of liquid: able to conserve
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RESULTS Participant 6: Female, 8 th grade Dilemma: No, Joe should not give his dad the money Reason: Because Joe worked hard for the money, he earned it, so therefore it is his. Stage: 5. Social Contract and Individual Rights Conservation of number: able to conserve Conservation of liquid: able to conserve
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RESULTS Participant 7: Female, 8 th grade Dilemma: Yes, Joe should give his dad the money Reason: He should give him the money because his dad works hard to pay bills and provide for the family Stage: 4. Maintaining the Social Order Conservation of number: able to conserve Conservation of liquid: able to conserve
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RESULTS Participant 8: Male, 8 th grade Dilemma: No, Joe should not give his dad the money Reason: Joe saved that money to go to camp Stage: 5. Social Contract and Individual Rights Conservation of number: able to conserve Conservation of liquid: unable to conserve*
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CONCLUSIONS Hypothesis 1: Accepted! In general, conserving children did achieve a higher stage of moral reasoning than non-conserving children as indicated on Kohlberg’s stage theory of moral development Hypothesis 2: Accepted! Children who could conserve volume generally achieved a higher stage of moral reasoning. However, those could not conserve volume generally could not conserve number either. Hypothesis 3: Rejected! There was no significant patterns of difference among conserving boys and conserving girls with respect to their stages of moral reasoning
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LIMITATIONS Convenience Sample Limited amount of children able to participate Children were distracted Previous exposure Not much explanation
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NATURE VS. NURTURE NATURENURTURE Piaget and Kohlberg
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WORKS CITED Crain, William. “Piaget’s Cognitive-Developmental theory” Theories of Development: Concepts and Applications. 4 th ed. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc. 2000 Crain, William. “Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Development” Theories of Development: Concepts and Applications. 4 th ed. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc. 2000 Kavathatzopoulos, Iordanis. "Kohlberg And Piaget: Differences And Similarities." Journal Of Moral Education 20.1 (1991): 47-54. ERIC. Web. 24 Oct. 2014 Kohlberg, Lawrence (1958). "The Development of Modes of Thinking and Choices in Years 10 to 16". Ph. D. Dissertation, University of Chicago. http://www.biography.com/people/jean-piaget-9439915#early-life http://totallyhistory.com/lawrence-kohlberg/ http://totallyhistory.com/lawrence-kohlberg/ http://www.edpsycinteractive.org/topics/affect/values.html
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