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- Title
Moral Reasoning of Education Students: The Effects of Direct Instruction in Moral Development Theory and Participation in Moral Dilemma Discussion.
- Authors
CUMMINGS, RHODA; MADDUX, CLEBORNE D.; CLADIANOS, ANTONIA; RICHMOND, AARON
- Abstract
Background/Context: Results of the few studies that have investigated moral reasoning in education students suggest that such reasoning may be Iess advanced for them than for college students with non-education majors and that education students do not appear to advance in moral reasoning from freshman to senior year. Purpose: The purpose of the present study was to test an educational intervention designed to advance moral reasoning scores of undergraduate elementary and secondary education students. Setting: The study was conducted in undergraduate classrooms at the University of Nevada, Reno, a Western Land Grant institution. Participants: Participants were undergraduate elementary (n = 94) and secondary education majors (n = 98) and undergraduate students majoring in English literature and philosophy (n = 42). Research Design: The study was a quasi-experimental design. Data Collection and Analysis: Undergraduate education students enrolled in four sections of an introduction to educational psychology course received interventions designed to advance moral reasoning. English and philosophy courses were chosen as control groups. Over a period of 5 weeks, students in the intervention groups were taught moral development theories and participated in online dilemma discussion. An additional 3 weeks were devoted to pretesting and posttesting activities. Results: A 2 x 5 mixed analysis of variance (ANOVA; time by group) with repeated measures on time was conducted to analyze pre- and posttest2 DFF P-scores for all five subgroups. Significant increases in mean DFF P-scores were found for the elementary and secondary intervention groups but not for the control groups. Gains in both the elementary and secondary groups were maintained at posttest2 at the end of the semester, but there were no significant differences from posttest1 to posttest2. To determine the effectiveness of hypothetical versus real-life dilemma discussion on moral reasoning, a 2 x 3 mixed ANOVA (time by group) was conducted. The ANOVA main effect for time and the interaction were significant, whereas the main effect for group was not significant. Conclusions/Recommendations: Results of the present study support findings of previous studies providing evidence that principled moral reasoning can be advanced by deliberate educational interventions. Future studies should investigate whether gains will be maintained over longer periods of time than a single semester and whether mere gains in moral reasoning scores translate to a broader range of moral behaviors.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of college students; ETHICS education; STUDENT ethics; MORAL development; DILEMMA; GRADUATE study in education; HIGHER education
- Publication
Teachers College Record, 2010, Vol 112, Issue 3, p621
- ISSN
0161-4681
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/016146811011200305