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The Effects of Upbringing and Culture on Moral Development

Past Research

Haidt, J., Koller, S. H., & Dias, M. G. (1993). Affect, culture, and morality, or is it wrong to eat your dog? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 65(4), 613–628. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.65.4.613 ]

Walker, L. J., & Hennig, K. H. (1999). Parenting style and the development of Moral Reasoning. Journal of Moral Education, 28(3), 359–374. https://doi.org/10.1080/030572499103133

(Haidt et al; 1993) explores the relationship between culture, affect, and morality

Article 1

Hypothesis

- Culture shapes affective reactions

- Affective reactions influence moral judgement

Method

- Structured Interviews

- Harmful. Vs. Harmless Conditions

- Moral Intuition is Determined by Culture

(Walker et al; 1999) highlights the importance of affect and parenting on Moral Development

Hypothesis

- affective and cognitive factors

- Parent-child interactions

Method

- Audio-recorded Interviews

- Parenting style shapes child’s moral Reasoning

- Hostility/poor ego = minimal moral development

Article 2

My Hypothesis

Upbringing influences children's moral development more than cultural pressure.

Hypothesis

Methods

Method

- 35 families: Parents & Children (9-13yrs)

- Four conditions: High vs. Low

- IV1: Upbringing , IV2: Culture

- DV: Moral values

- Nonmaleficence (Do no harm), Autonomy, Justice, Altruism

You found a lost puppy in the park. What would you do?

a) Keep it for yourself

b) Take the puppy to a animal shelter

c) Ignore the puppy

A classmate forgot their lunch at home, and you have an extra sandwich. What would you do?

a) Don't give the sandwhich

b) Offer to share

c) Tease your classmate

DV Example

Anticipated Results

Results

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