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Ji Ying; Liz Jackson – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2025
It is a widespread belief in many cultural contexts that teachers shall be moral educators and moral exemplars. However, in recent years, this conventional belief has been challenged by progressive views of various social and educational changes. In China, there is a particularly long tradition of regarding teachers as moral guardians who shall…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Moral Values, Moral Development, Teacher Attitudes
Hyemin Han; Marja Graham – Theory and Research in Education, 2024
The present study aimed to examine how to improve the effectiveness of moral exemplar-applied interventions based on the pillars of the self-determination theory framework, autonomy, competence, and relatedness. Past research has mainly focused on the relatedness and attainability of moral exemplars for predicting motivation outcomes. The data for…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Self Determination, Intervention, Reliability
Yubing Liu – Journal of Moral Education, 2024
Existing literature has noticed two competing ideas about the state-citizen relationship promoted in China's moral education curriculum: protecting one's freedom and rights, and contributing to and even sacrificing for the country. To reconcile this contradiction, this study uses the framework of 'neoliberalism as exception' to analyze the…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Moral Values, Moral Development, Foreign Countries
Krettenauer, Tobias; Curren, Randall – Journal of Moral Education, 2020
Self-Determination Theory (SDT) is an empirically based organismic theory of human motivation, development, and well-being that shares many points of interest with the fields of moral development and moral education. Yet, SDT has been largely disconnected from these fields so far. How can we define and empirically assess autonomous moral…
Descriptors: Self Determination, Moral Values, Well Being, Moral Development
Carol Gilligan – Harvard Educational Review, 2024
As theories of developmental psychology continue to define educational goals and practice, it has become imperative for educators and researchers to scrutinize not only the underlying assumptions of such theories but also the model of adulthood toward which they point. Carol Gilligan examines the limitations of several theories, most notably…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Females, Empowerment, Moral Development
Dewi Puspitasari; Sri Wuli Fitriati; Widhiyanto; Katharina Rustipa – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: The integration of moral values into EFL teaching has been an important issue in Indonesia as multimodal literacy practices can be employed to foster both language learning and moral development among young learners. This study investigated how multimodal learning can be used to promote moral values alongside language skills…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Moral Development, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction
Curren, Randall; Ryan, Richard M. – Journal of Moral Education, 2020
This paper addresses three basic questions about moral motivation. Concerning the nature of moral motivation, it argues that it involves responsiveness to both reasons of morality and the value of persons and everything else of value. Moral motivation is thus identified as reason-responsive appropriate valuing. Regarding whether it is possible for…
Descriptors: Motivation, Moral Values, Moral Development, Positive Attitudes
Nakazawa, Yoshiaki Michael – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2018
There is a sustained critique of autonomy in Iris Murdoch's work in moral philosophy and moral education. I explicate Murdoch's arguments against a moral education that aims at autonomy, showing that this kind of moral education is ensnared in problematic dualisms: a fact and value dualism (sometimes discussed as a dualism between metaphorical…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Moral Development, Educational Philosophy, Personal Autonomy
Takagi, Yoko; Saltzstein, Herbert D. – Early Child Development and Care, 2022
This paper reports young (3-5 year-olds') children's cognitive and affective understanding of actual moral (harm to others) and prudential (harm to self) transgressions in the family, as reported by the parent, but in a way that provides the child the opportunity to reflect on and reason about the actual events. A total of 38 parent-child dyads…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Moral Values, Parent Child Relationship, Cognitive Ability
DiBianca Fasoli, Allison; Lozano, Grace – Journal of Moral Education, 2020
Much of the previous work on culture and moral reasoning development has focused on the cultural content of moral reasoning, demonstrating how moral autonomy, which emphasizes justice and individual welfare, is culturally structured. This paper investigates cultural processes of autonomous moral reasoning development by analyzing parent-child…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Moral Values, Personal Autonomy, Moral Development
Bezalel, Glenn Y. – Theory and Research in Education, 2020
There has been a growing literature among philosophers of education on how to frame questions of moral controversy in the classroom. Through the application of hard moral cases that may be said to leave one 'morally dumbfounded', I take up Michael Hand's influential epistemic criterion and attempt to show why its monistic approach is too limited…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Educational Philosophy, Moral Development, Epistemology
Perry-Hazan, Lotem; Neuhof, Liron – Journal of Teacher Education, 2021
The study explores the rights consciousness of senior teachers who participated in a student rights professional development (PD) course and designed educational projects during the course. It analyzes teachers' perceptions of students' rights and the influence of the PD and other factors on these perceptions. The data included interviews with 17…
Descriptors: Student Rights, Teacher Attitudes, Personal Autonomy, Freedom of Speech
Dumler-Winckler, Emily – Journal of Moral Education, 2018
'Genius, cannot be taught,' Ralph Waldo Emerson reports, reiterating Socrates's conclusion in Plato's "Meno." This article considers this claim and its significance for moral education, specifically in modern science, by focusing on Emerson's account of genius and the virtue of self-trust that perfects it. Genius, for Emerson, does not…
Descriptors: Ethics, Educational Philosophy, Moral Development, Values Education
McKenzie, Jessica – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2019
This article explores how globalization reshapes moral development in northern Thailand. Employing a cultural-developmental approach to examine interview data gathered over the course of one year, the article discusses variations in Divinity-based moral reasoning among adolescents residing in variously globalized Thai communities. Quantitative…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Urban Areas, Rural Areas, Buddhism
Stabler, Albert – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2018
A primary function of schooling is to impart moral discipline, and art education distills this role to its core imperative of mandated pleasure, summarised by Jacques Lacan as the 'will to enjoy'. This manifests in the insistence that, despite producing similar outcomes, students come to recognise themselves as unique and creative. In the…
Descriptors: Art Education, Moral Values, Foreign Countries, Artists

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