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Natalia V. Vinogradova; Sergey V. Bykov; Igor G. Panov; Vladimir I. Rotmistrov; Alexey V. Zuev – Education in the Asia-Pacific Region: Issues, Concerns and Prospects, 2025
The research aims to consider artistic culture as a process of reflecting the spiritual and moral consciousness of contemporary society as an integrated product of socio-cultural, artistic, and aesthetic human activity. The research is of sociological, philosophical, and cultural nature. The research analyzes the existing values, worldview…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Moral Development, Cultural Influences, World Views
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Vikan, Arne – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1976
This study tested the hypothesis that objective and subjective responsibility responses in moral judgment may be formally equal forms of cognitive organization. Results showed that subjects acting as offenders gave subjective responsibility responses; the same subjects acting as offended gave objective responsibility responses. Thus, subjects'…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Moral Development
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McGillicuddy-De Lisi, Ann V.; And Others – Child Development, 1994
Investigated how children's decisions about allocating money to story characters were affected by the relationship (friends versus strangers) among the characters. Children's rationales for their decisions showed that equality was the most salient principle for decisions at all ages and that older children provided rationales based on benevolence…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Age Differences, Child Development, Children
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Langford, Peter E.; Claydon, Leslie F. – Educational Studies, 1989
Reports on the results of 2 studies that use a non-Kohlbergian approach to categorizing justifications for moral judgments by Australian subjects from 7 to 15 and from 7 to 21 years. These studies support the view that moral reasoning up to late adolescence is largely a product of socialization. (KO)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Educational Research, Ethics, Foreign Countries
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DeHaan, Robert; Hanford, Russell; Kinlaw, Kathleen; Philler, David; Snarey, John – Journal of Moral Education, 1997
Compares the effectiveness of three classes teaching ethical reasoning to high school students. The three classes were an introductory ethics class, a blended economics-ethics class, and a role-model ethics class taught by graduate students. Tests measured the ways students reason, feel, and act with regard to ethical-normative issues. (MJP)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Beliefs, Ethical Instruction, Ethics