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Gender and Moral Development. Narrow Morality Why do some people recognize a higher moral law, while others are simply content to obey rules without question?

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Presentation on theme: "Gender and Moral Development. Narrow Morality Why do some people recognize a higher moral law, while others are simply content to obey rules without question?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Gender and Moral Development

2 Narrow Morality Why do some people recognize a higher moral law, while others are simply content to obey rules without question?

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4 Moral Dilemmas: Heinz

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6 Who cares about my stage?!  Your stage matters!  Problem-solving changes in your 20s-30s  Specific educational attempts to influence awareness  Behavior is influenced by moral perception and moral judgments  Kohlberg cared…

7 Carefully collected international data  Aboriginal villages in Malaysia  Turkey  Yucatán  Urban areas in the US and Mexico

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9 Carol Gilligan

10 Women & Kohlberg  Women often scored a full stage below their male counterparts  Women focused on SOLUTIONS THAT PRESERVED CONNECTIONS

11 What’s going on?  Either women are less morally developed than men OR  Something is wrong with Kohlberg’s framework

12 Women and their moral dilemmas

13 In a Different VOICE  Harmony without sameness  Collaborative (not competitive/combative)  Voices are different without excluding one another  A wide vocabulary that has NOTHING to do with right/wrong or true/false

14 Men’s View of the Self  Autonomy  Freedom  Independence  Separateness  Hierarchy  Rules guide interactions  Roles establish place in hierarchy

15 Women’s View of the Self  Relatedness  Interdependence  Emotional Connectedness  Responsiveness to needs of others  Web of relationships  Empathy & connectedness guide interactions  Roles are secondary to connections

16 Men’s Moral Voices  Justice  Rights  Treating everyone fair/the same  Apply rules impartially to everyone  Responsibility towards abstract codes of conduct

17 Women’s Moral Voices  Care  Responsibility  Caring about everyone's suffering  Preserve emotional connectedness  Responsibility toward real individuals

18 Stages of Women’s Moral Development

19 Umm…who cares?  Different ideas about what to do about these gender-based ways of making decisions

20 Separate but equal  Men and women have different but equally valuable moral voices  Reinforces stereotypes  Hard to retain “…but equal” part  We have nothing to learn from one another  Devalues those with “non-traditional” moral voices

21 Superiority Thesis  Women’s moral voices are superior  Exclusionary  Demands that someone be the loser  Inverts traditional claims of male “superiority”

22 Integrationist Thesis  There is only one moral voice: It’s the same for men and women  No richness or diversity  Assimilationist-everybody needs to fall in line with the powerful majority

23 Diversity Thesis  There are different moral voices and this is a source of richness and diversity  External: Different sex-based moral voices  Internal: We all have masculine AND feminine moral voices within us Minimizes gender stereotyping

24 Bem’s Sex Roles

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26 How does all of this carry over to leadership?  3 male + 3 female leaders  What industry?  Adjectives to describe them as an individual  Adjectives to describe their moral voice  What you think it’s like to work for them?

27 Leadership Preferences?

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29 Sam Palmisano: CEO IBM

30 Where are we headed? “We need not just a new generation of leadership but a new gender of leadership.” -Bill Clinton Acknowledgement that BOTH male and female voices and leadership styles are necessary for a successful organization!

31 Next Class  Tokenism & the pay gap


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