• Title/Summary/Keyword: Moral Behavior

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Relationships Between Children's Moral Judgement, Moral Emotions and Moral Behavior (유아의 도덕적 판단력, 도덕적 감정과 도덕적 행동의 관계)

  • Kim, Jin Ah;Ohm, Jung Ae
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.85-100
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    • 2006
  • In this study of the relationship between moral judgment, moral emotions and moral behavior, 137 five-year-olds were interviewed to measure moral judgment and moral emotions. Their teachers measured children's moral behavior. Results showed that children judged moral and conventional rules by using the 4 criterion judgments of seriousness, rule contingency, generalizability and punishment. Children with highly felt moral emotions had higher scores in moral behavior. Moral judgment, moral emotions and moral behavior were highly interrelated. Children's moral behavior was related to rule contingency and generalizability. Their moral behavior was highly related to positive moral emotions. Positive moral emotions were related to the rule contingency and generalizability. Negative moral emotions were highly related to seriousness and punishment.

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Developmental Analysis of Morality(Belief, Judgment & Behavior) in Relation to Attribution (귀인 경향에 따른 도덕성(도덕신념, 판단, 행동) 발달 분석)

  • 하영희
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.271-282
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    • 1996
  • Different aspects of morality, namely, moral belief, moral judgement and moral behavior have been studied seperately. This study examined the development of these three aspects of morality in relation to internal attribution in one sample. A total of 371, third -and sixth- grade children from Masan city were responded to questionnaires on moral belief, moral judgement, and attibutional tendency. In addition, children's moral behavior was measured by the teachers' 5-item rating scale. As results, there were signigicant but low correlations among three components of morality. There were developmental differences in moral belief and moral judgement but there was no age difference in moral behavior. Compared to third graders, sixth graders were higher in moral judgement but lower in moral belief. Social experience as well as cognitive development on moral relativity could explain this paradoxical developmental trend in moral belief. There was a sex difference only on moral behavior : Girls were rated higher in moral behavior than boys. Internal attribution was significantly correlated with all three aspects of morality, .15 with moral belief, .45 with moral judgement, .14 with moral behavior, respectively. There was a significant developmental difference but no sex difference in attributional tendency: Sixth graders reported higher internal attribution than third graders. However, there was no developmental difference in correlations among internal attribution and three aspects of morality. Most importantly, internal attribution explained morality better than either age -or sex- variable. It was suggested that educational programs on morality need to focus on the internalization of it.

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The Role of Moral Deficiency in Moral Consumption Behavior - The Implicit and Explicit Approaches: An Empirical Study from Indonesia

  • SYAHRIVAR, Jhanghiz;GENOVEVA, Genoveva;WIDYANTO, Hanif Adinugroho;WEI, Yuling;CHAIRY, Chairy
    • The Journal of Asian Finance, Economics and Business
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    • v.8 no.11
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    • pp.307-316
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    • 2021
  • This research aims to investigate the relationship between moral deficiency and moral consumption. Consumers' moral values cannot be separated from their consumption activities. In other words, consumers' spending preferences may be an expression of their beliefs about what is right and wrong. A less explored concept within moral consumption behavior theory is 'moral deficiency'. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first research effort to integrate green purchasing and religious purchasing under the banner of moral consumption behavior. There are two studies: Study 1 aimed to measure the moral deficiency of participants through moral scenarios (implicit) and then test its relationship with the green purchase and religious purchase, two proxies of moral consumption. A total of 121 universities were chosen via the nonprobability sampling method. To improve the results of the prior study, Study 2 aimed to measure the moral deficiency of participants through moral deficiency self-report (explicit) and then test its effects on green purchase and religious purchase. A total of 208 participants from the general public were recruited via the nonprobability sampling method. The findings of the two studies suggest that participants with high moral deficiency showed more intention to engage in moral consumption behavior.

The Influences of Moral Disengagement and Moral Emotions on Bullying Assistant Behavior (도덕적 이탈 및 도덕적 정서가 또래괴롭힘에 대한 가해동조행동에 미치는 영향)

  • Seo, Mijung
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.34 no.6
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    • pp.123-138
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    • 2013
  • The purpose of the present study which regards bullying as a group process was to examine the direct and indirect influences of moral disengagement, empathy, and guilt on bullying assistant behavior. The participants consisted of 442 6th graders from an elementary school(male : 227, female : 215). The findings from this study are as follows. First, there are significant correlations between moral disengagement, empathy, guilt, and bullying assistant behavior. Second, moral disengagement have not only direct influences but also indirect influences through empathy and guilt on bullying assistant behavior. Moral disengagement was the strongest predictor of bullying assistant behavior. Finally, the implications for future research and intervention in bullying were also discussed.

The Influence of Suppressing Guilt and Shame on Moral Judgment, Intention, and Behavior (죄책감과 수치심의 억제가 도덕적 판단, 의도, 행동에 미치는 영향)

  • Han, Kyueun;Kim, Min Young;Sohn, Young Woo
    • Science of Emotion and Sensibility
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.121-132
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    • 2016
  • Emotion is considered to be involved in the moral decision-making process consisting of moral judgment, moral intention, and moral behavior. This research investigated the distinct role of two specific moral emotions, guilt and shame, when they are suppressed, on moral judgment, moral intention, and moral behavior through an online experiment. Moral emotion (guilt vs. shame) as well as suppression of these emotions (suppressing vs. control) was manipulated to infer the causality of moral emotions and the moral decision-making process when they are suppressed. The results suggest that suppressing guilt was involved in moral judgment and moral intention, but was not involved in moral behavior. In particular, participants who maintained guilt evaluated moral vignettes as more moral and perceived that they would follow the behavior described in the vignettes than those participants who suppressed their guilt. On the other hand, our data showed that suppressing shame was not involved in moral judgment and intention but was in behavior. Participants who maintained shame engaged in moral behavior more than participants who suppressed shame. We delineate the different mechanisms between guilt and shame on the moral decision-making process with the discrete emotion theory.

Father's Child-Rearing Behaviors and Children's Prosocial Moral Judgement (아버지의 양육 참여행동과 아동의 친사회적 도덕판단능력)

  • Jeong, Hyean Hee;Choi, Kyoung Soon
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.38-51
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    • 1992
  • The purposes of this study are to investigate (1) the father's child-rearing behavior perceived by children in relation to children's sex, family type and mother's job, (2) children's prosocial moral judgement as related to children's sex, family type, and mother's job, and (3) the effect of father's child-rearing behavior on children's prosocial moral judgement. The subjects were 432 5th-6th grade elementary school children in Pusan, For the measurement of father's child-rearing behavior, this researcher developed a father's child-rearing behavior questionnaire based on Choi's (1991) questionnaire, For the children's prosocial moral judgement. the 4 prosocial moral dilemma by Eisenberg-Berg was used, The major findings were as follows, No significant results were found in relation to father's child-rearing behavior and child's sex, family type, and mother's work status, Children's prosocial behavior was not related to any of the above variables, Significant relationships were found between father's child-rearing behavior and children's prosocial moral judgement.

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Moral Judgment and Moral Reasoning in 3- and 5-Year-Olds : - Aggressive Behavior - (공격 행동에 대한 유아의 도덕 판단과 추론: -공격 행동의 의도와 결과 제시 유무를 중심으로-)

  • Park, Jin Hui;Yi, Soon Hyung
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.26 no.2
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    • pp.1-14
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    • 2005
  • This study investigated moral judgment and moral reasoning about aggressive behavior by intention, presentation of results of aggressive behavior, and age of child. Forty-four 3-year old and forty-six 5-year-old day-care children in Seoul and Kyonggi Province were interviewed individually with 20 pictorial tasks. Data analysis was by frequencies, percentiles, means, standard deviations, paired t-test, and ANOVA(repeated measures). Both age groups judged instrumental and resentment-based types of aggression to be worse than prosocial or rule observance-based aggression. Both age groups judged aggressive behavior to be worse when results of aggression were presented. Five-year-olds judged aggression to be worse on instrumental than on retributive types of intent. Level of reasoning on aggressive behavior was lowest in cases of satisfying resentment Level of reasoning about aggression increased with age.

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The Effect of Parental Psychological Control and Moral Disengagement on Children's Participant Role Behavior in a Bullying Situations (부모의 심리적 통제와 아동의 도덕적 이탈이 또래괴롭힘 참여자 역할행동에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Ji Mi;Kim, Jung Min
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.34 no.6
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    • pp.13-29
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    • 2013
  • The purpose of this study was to examine the mediating effect of moral disengagement concerning the parental psychological control on children's participant role behavior in bullying situations. For the purposes of this research, a group of participants comprising total 541 students of fifth, seventh, eighth, tenth and eleventh grades from schools based in Seoul and Incheon were surveyed. As far as research methods are concerned, scales for parental psychological control, moral disengagement and participant role behavior in a bullying situation were used. The main findings of this research were as follows. First, by gender, there was a significant difference in participant role behavior in bullying. By grade, a significant difference was shown in parental psychological control, participant role behavior in bullying and moral disengagement. Second, variables affecting participant role behavior in bullying situations were found to be influenced by the types of role behavior respectively as well as by students' grade levels. Third, moral disengagement concerning the influence of parental psychological control on participant role behavior was found to have a full mediating effect on bystander behavior among elementary school students and bullying behavior among middle school and high school students.

The Structural Relationships Between College Student's Altruistic Behavior and Related Variables in the Times of Convergence (융복합 시대의 대학생의 이타행동과 관련변인들의 구조적 관계 분석)

  • Chang, Yong-Hee;Lee, Jae-Shin
    • Journal of Digital Convergence
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.361-372
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study was to examine the mediating effect of moral elevation and self control on the relationship between moral identity, character strengths, family strengths, and altruistic behavior in the times of convergence. The collected data were analyzed by SEM. The results of this study were as follows: First, moral self has indirect effect on altruistic behavior through moral elevation and self control in turn, and character strengths, have indirect effect on altruistic behavior through moral elevation and self control and moral elevation, self control in turn, and family strengths have indirect effect on altruistic behavior through self control. Second, it was found that there was a significant gender difference in the structural weights of character strengths and moral elevation.

Children's Prosocial Moral Reasoning and Prosocial Behavior (과제의 부담과 종류에 따른 아동의 친사회적 도덕추론과 친사회적 행동)

  • Lee, Ok Kyung;Yi, Soon Hyung
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.275-288
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    • 1996
  • The purposes of this study were to investigate children's prosocial behavior by age and sex and to examine the relationship between children's prosocial moral reasoning and prosocial behavior by costs and types of tasks. The subjects were 300 3th-and 6th-graders enrolled in elementary schools in Seoul. The revised form of Prosocial Moral Dilemmas including costs and types of tasks was used. The tasks of prosocial behaviors included time-cost tasks, money-cost tasks and physical strength-cost tasks. For data analysis, the paired t-test, two-way ANOVA, and Pearson's Correlations were used. Major findings were as follows; (1)There was age difference in children's prosocial behavior. 6th-graders performed at a higher level than 3th-graders. Sex differences weren't significant. In low- and high-cost tasks and in time-, money-, and physical strength-cost tasks, there were (2) Scores on high-cost behavior tasks were higher than on low-cost tasks. (3) Children's prosocial moral reasoning was positively related to prosocial behavior; in low- and high-cost tasks, and in time-, money-, and physical strength-cost tasks.

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