ADULT MORAL DEVELOPMENT, EXPERIENCE AND EDUCATION

Authors
Citation
C. Armon, ADULT MORAL DEVELOPMENT, EXPERIENCE AND EDUCATION, Journal of moral education, 27(3), 1998, pp. 345-370
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Education & Educational Research
Journal title
ISSN journal
03057240
Volume
27
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
345 - 370
Database
ISI
SICI code
0305-7240(1998)27:3<345:AMDEAE>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
This article reports two studies-a longitudinal investigation of moral judgement and reported moral experience, and an outcome study on the impact of a moral intervention project with adult undergraduate studen ts. In the first study, 29 middle-class, primarily white, well-educate d adults, ranging in age from 18 to 80 were administered Standard Form Moral Judgment interviews 4 years apart and were asked to describe th eir own moral events that had occurred. The average moral judgement sc ore on the hypothetical dilemmas was Stage Four. The reasoning in the spontaneously reported moral events was significantly lower, although the two scores were highly correlated Difference scores between the tw o were not related to dilemma scores. While there were no significant gender differences in scores on the hypothetical dilemmas, there were in scores on spontaneous-reported events favouring males. The ethical quality of the reported events could be easily categorised by traditio nal moral-philosophic categories. About half the events contained trad itional deontic moral content (moral right); the other half contained material defined as the moral good. The context of most events was int erpersonal, as opposed to societal. The second study investigated the reported impact on mostly white, middle- and upper-class undergraduate students who participated in a mentor programme in an inner-city high school, a programme designed to impact bath moral thinking and moral sentiments (motivation). Thirty-nine adults, ranging in age from 20 to 57 participated, of which 26 were female and 13 were male. In both sh ort- and long-term follow-up surveys, most participants reported major changes in their thinking about and motivation to address social just ice issues.