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Costley, Kevin C.; Harrington, Kayla – Online Submission, 2012
Due to the eroding family composition of American families today and other important variables contributing to children's lack of social skills and inappropriate behaviors, the implementation of a Character Education curriculum is a greater need in schools today. This need is much more pressing than during the middle of the last century. Some…
Descriptors: Integrity, Values Education, Ethical Instruction, Educational Needs
Sockett, Hugh; Alston, Kal – 1989
This document explores the way in which courage, as a central virtue, and friendship, as a valued human state, have a significant place within the view of the education of character. Education of character is determined to bridge the gap between moral judgment and moral action. This paper has five sections. First, the need for character education…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Friendship, Moral Development
Hague, William J. – Gifted Education International, 1998
Describes higher levels of morality by contrasting Kohlber's Cognitive Developmentalism and Dabrowski's Positive Disintegration. It argues that far from being a gift, high-level morality is a function of the whole person. It is something chosen and striven for, and the result of compassion and some kind of disintegration. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Cognitive Development, Definitions, Empathy
Himes, Kenneth – Momentum, 1994
Discusses the role of conscience in moral decisions and several approaches to moral education. Indicates that moral development is an interactive process between children and their environment and that empathy, delayed gratification, and the courage to withstand social pressure must be encouraged in the moral education of youth. (MAB)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction, Integrity, Moral Development

Turiel, Elliot; Smetana, Judith G. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1998
Defends domain theory approach to children's moral development based on limitations of Piaget's original theory. Argues that Fowler's characterization of domain theory research omits important features and studies. Maintains that distinctions between morality and convention cannot be reduced to differences in perceptible harm and punishment; it is…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Early Experience, Moral Development
Covaleskie, John F. – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2006
In this article, John F. Covaleskie considers a threefold question: (1) what is the nature of the sort of liberty that enables one to live as a free person, but also bound by the requirements of democratic citizenship; (2) what is the nature of the virtues that make this sort of person possible; and (3) what is the nature of the educational…
Descriptors: Freedom, Discipline, Democratic Values, Values Education
Boston Univ., MA. Center for the Advancement of Ethics and Character. – 1996
This paper describes guiding principles of educational reform founded upon character education. The signatories of the declaration recognize the following precepts for character education: (1) Education in its fullest sense is inescapably a moral enterprise; (2) We strongly affirm parents as the primary moral educators of their children and…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, Elementary Secondary Education, Integrity, Moral Development

Dobert, Ranier – Zeitschrift fur Padagogik, 1987
Offers a critical analysis of Kohlberg's moral development theory. Claims that the theory misses a level of operative structures and needs to have its stage descriptions revised. Concludes by considering instructional implications. (Author/JDH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethical Instruction

Carlin, David R., Jr. – Educational Theory, 1981
Instead of confirming John Dewey's ideas, Lawrence Kohlberg's writings on moral-cognitive development conflict with some of Dewey's principal concepts about moral development. Dewey's views of psychological growth, or development, and attainment of the good are contrasted with Kohlberg's findings. (PP)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages, Educational Philosophy
Cortese, Anthony – 1984
The cultural universal hypothesis of cognitive development theory, as developed by Piaget and elaborated by Kohlberg, assumes that all individuals, regardless of culture, progress through the same series of six invariant stages in the development of moral judgment. The stages of moral development are transformations in the form of structure of…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Cognitive Development, Cultural Differences, Hispanic American Culture

Stewart, Abigail J.; Healy, Joseph J., Jr. – Journal of Social Issues, 1986
The life of British feminist and pacifist Vera Brittain demonstrates that an attempt to understand the relationship between personal experience and political activities should take account of the following: (1) the centrality of political values in an individual's identity; (2) the individual's life stage and life history; and (3) the individual's…
Descriptors: Feminism, Individual Development, Moral Development, Moral Values

Fowler, R. Clark – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1998
Domain theorists' findings in Piaget's work in children's moral development do not contradict Piaget because they are predicted by objective responsibility; research has not established that children distinguish between moral and conventional events. Claims that Piaget underestimated early morality are based on research that neglects children's…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Early Experience
Davidson, Philip M. – 1991
The concept of autonomous identity, derived from Piaget's theory of personality, is distinguished from other applications of the term "autonomy" in psychological theory. Introductory comments suggest that both biological and mental development express autonomy in the same two senses: as self-regulating and progressively self-liberating.…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Developmental Psychology, Individual Development, Moral Development
Sizer, Theodore R.; Sizer, Nancy Faust – 1999
This book claims that morality is a two-way street, and adolescent students learn by watching teachers. It argues that schools should incorporate morality as a pivotal tool in education, noting that the American school is an exhausting, inefficient, and often dehumanizing place of work for teenagers and their elders. Students learn not just from…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Ethical Instruction, Moral Development, Moral Values

Siegel, Harvey – Educational Theory, 1981
Lawrence Kohlberg's empirical research does not, in itself, justify the claim that his higher stages of moral development are more adequately moral than lower stages; consequently, using Kohlbergian interventions to promote student development through these stages is unjustified. Empirical research, while necessary for planning and executing…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Educational Philosophy, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education
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