Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence

Higher education institutions in the United States have historically been tasked with the responsibility of scaffolding the moral development of students. Although empirical evidence suggests that attending colleges and universities can foster students’ moral development and reasoning, the effect o...

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Main Authors: Marina A. Klimenko, Nicholas Surdel, Kathryn Muir, Fuaad Sofia
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Adam Mickiewicz University 2019-02-01
Series:Ethics in Progress
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/17873
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spelling doaj-4bb71a56ce6b4795aca9a7753e2ea3b62020-11-25T02:44:51ZdeuAdam Mickiewicz UniversityEthics in Progress2084-92572019-02-019210.14746/eip.2018.2.416781Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral CompetenceMarina A. Klimenko0Nicholas Surdel1Kathryn Muir2Fuaad Sofia3University of Florida, Gainesville.University of Florida, Gainesville.University of Florida, Gainesville.University of Florida, Gainesville. Higher education institutions in the United States have historically been tasked with the responsibility of scaffolding the moral development of students. Although empirical evidence suggests that attending colleges and universities can foster students’ moral development and reasoning, the effect of online higher education remains mainly unknown. The current study has examined the effect of two online psychology courses, Developmental Psychology and Research Methods Lab, and their respective assignments on students’ moral competence. The findings revealed that students’ moral competence in both courses was improved; this improvement was partly attributed to online group discussions in the Developmental psychology course. No other assignments were found to be significant contributors of students’ moral competence. Limitations and implications of the findings were discussed. http://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/17873MoralityHigher EducationOnline Higher EducationMoral CompetenceMoral Development
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marina A. Klimenko
Nicholas Surdel
Kathryn Muir
Fuaad Sofia
spellingShingle Marina A. Klimenko
Nicholas Surdel
Kathryn Muir
Fuaad Sofia
Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence
Ethics in Progress
Morality
Higher Education
Online Higher Education
Moral Competence
Moral Development
author_facet Marina A. Klimenko
Nicholas Surdel
Kathryn Muir
Fuaad Sofia
author_sort Marina A. Klimenko
title Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence
title_short Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence
title_full Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence
title_fullStr Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence
title_full_unstemmed Can Online College Education Make Students Smarter and More Moral? A Preliminary Study of the Effects of Two Online College Course Assignments on Students’ Moral Competence
title_sort can online college education make students smarter and more moral? a preliminary study of the effects of two online college course assignments on students’ moral competence
publisher Adam Mickiewicz University
series Ethics in Progress
issn 2084-9257
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Higher education institutions in the United States have historically been tasked with the responsibility of scaffolding the moral development of students. Although empirical evidence suggests that attending colleges and universities can foster students’ moral development and reasoning, the effect of online higher education remains mainly unknown. The current study has examined the effect of two online psychology courses, Developmental Psychology and Research Methods Lab, and their respective assignments on students’ moral competence. The findings revealed that students’ moral competence in both courses was improved; this improvement was partly attributed to online group discussions in the Developmental psychology course. No other assignments were found to be significant contributors of students’ moral competence. Limitations and implications of the findings were discussed.
topic Morality
Higher Education
Online Higher Education
Moral Competence
Moral Development
url http://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/17873
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