We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Does Moral Education Improve Moral Judgment? A Meta-Analysis of Intervention Studies Using the Defining Issues Test.
- Authors
Schlaefli, Andre; Rest, James R.; Thoma, Stephen J.
- Abstract
A review was conducted of 55 studies of education interventions designed to stimulate development in moral judgment. All studies used the Defining Issues Test. Various subject groups were involved (junior and senior high school students, college and graduate students, adults), various types of programs were employed (group discussion of moral dilemmas, psychological development programs, social studies and humanities courses), and the duration of the programs varied (a few hours to a year-long program). The principal findings from meta-analysis indicate that the dilemma discussion and psychological development programs produce modest overall effect sizes, that treatments of about 3 to 12 weeks are optimal, and that programs with adults (24 years and older) produce larger effect sizes than with younger subjects; however, significant effect sizes are obtained with all groups.
- Subjects
MORAL education; MORAL judgment; DEVELOPMENTAL psychology; META-analysis; HIGH school students; COLLEGE students
- Publication
Review of Educational Research, 1985, Vol 55, Issue 3, p319
- ISSN
0034-6543
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3102/00346543055003319