Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning

It has been claimed that both peer and family interactions are important in facilitating moral development. As well, there has been evidence suggesting that children's ego functioning is an important consideration in understanding moral functioning. This study investigated the relationship amon...

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Main Author: Matsuba, Michio K.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2135
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-21352018-01-05T17:30:32Z Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning Matsuba, Michio K. It has been claimed that both peer and family interactions are important in facilitating moral development. As well, there has been evidence suggesting that children's ego functioning is an important consideration in understanding moral functioning. This study investigated the relationship among these variables and how they relate to children’s moral reasoning level. Forty target children (Grade 5 and 10) participated along with a same-sex friend and a parent (total N = 120). Each participant's stage of moral development was assessed in a moral judgment interview. Target children also participated in two discussion sessions (one with a friend and one with a parent). In each discussion, three moral conflicts were discussed (two real-life and one hypothetical). Target children's ego functioning in these discussion sessions was rated by observers using a Q-sort procedure. Results revealed that older children tended to use more complex ego processes than younger children. As well, children generally “coped" more in discussing hypothetical dilemmas and "defended" more with real-life dilemmas. The predicted differences in ego functioning when discussing dilemmas with a peer versus a parent were not evident. However, consistent with expectations, a strong relation was found between ego functioning and level of moral reasoning with moral development being predicted by both cognitive coping and attention-focusing coping ego functions. The results are discussed in terms of the factors that foster moral growth in children. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2008-09-17T16:57:38Z 2008-09-17T16:57:38Z 1993 1993-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2135 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 4716716 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description It has been claimed that both peer and family interactions are important in facilitating moral development. As well, there has been evidence suggesting that children's ego functioning is an important consideration in understanding moral functioning. This study investigated the relationship among these variables and how they relate to children’s moral reasoning level. Forty target children (Grade 5 and 10) participated along with a same-sex friend and a parent (total N = 120). Each participant's stage of moral development was assessed in a moral judgment interview. Target children also participated in two discussion sessions (one with a friend and one with a parent). In each discussion, three moral conflicts were discussed (two real-life and one hypothetical). Target children's ego functioning in these discussion sessions was rated by observers using a Q-sort procedure. Results revealed that older children tended to use more complex ego processes than younger children. As well, children generally “coped" more in discussing hypothetical dilemmas and "defended" more with real-life dilemmas. The predicted differences in ego functioning when discussing dilemmas with a peer versus a parent were not evident. However, consistent with expectations, a strong relation was found between ego functioning and level of moral reasoning with moral development being predicted by both cognitive coping and attention-focusing coping ego functions. The results are discussed in terms of the factors that foster moral growth in children. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Matsuba, Michio K.
spellingShingle Matsuba, Michio K.
Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
author_facet Matsuba, Michio K.
author_sort Matsuba, Michio K.
title Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
title_short Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
title_full Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
title_fullStr Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
title_full_unstemmed Children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
title_sort children’s ego functioning and their stage of moral reasoning
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2135
work_keys_str_mv AT matsubamichiok childrensegofunctioningandtheirstageofmoralreasoning
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