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AME Conference 2007 Final Draft of Conference Program October 23, 2007 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 1 of 134 Thursday, November 15 Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for University Life 60 Washington Square South Registration Desk Open from 8:00 am-5:00 pm Morning Coffee from 8:30 am-10:00 am Workshops from 9:00 am-12:00 pm * *(Workshop # 6 will begin at 8:00 am) Workshops 1-8 Workshop 1 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room:Eisner/Lubin Title: Beyond the Classroom: Democratic Theater with Prisoners, Pushers, and Parolees Author(s): Kevin Bott, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: Democracy cannot survive without open and honest dialogue. Yet the most vulnerable of the world’s population are either denied permission to join the conversation, or are subjected to patronizing monologues from the so-called experts. University/community alliances can be undermined by miscommunication between those with social, cultural, and economic power disparities. This participatory workshop invites participants to engage in drama exercises used by the facilitator in prisons and outpatient clinics in New York and Africa. These activities are designed to foster dialogue, examine and interrogate cultural and racial barriers, and complicate the roles of facilitator and participant. Video of prison and clinic work will be screened. Workshop 2 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 903 Title: EQUIP for Educators for Behaviorally At-Risk Students: Pedagogy, Praxis and Pragmatics of Program Implementation Author(s): Ann-Marie DiBiase, Faculty of Education, Brock University, Canada Jan van Westerlaak, International Trainer of the EQUIP for Educators Program, The Netherlands Abstract: EQUIP for Educators (EFE) is a psychoeducational intervention program that seeks to remediate the limitations widely evident among behaviorally at risk students. These limitations can be characterized as three socially problematic “Ds ": (a) developmental 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 2 of 134 delays in moral judgment, (b) self-serving cognition distortions, and (c) social skill deficiencies. These limitations are interrelated, and so are the components of EFE. Remediation of these delays, distortions, and deficiencies can occur by equipping at-risk students with: (a) mature moral judgment (Social Decision-Making), (b) skills for managing anger and correcting self-serving cognitive distortions (Anger Management), and (c) social skills for balanced and constructive social behavior (Social Skills.) Workshop 3 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 905 Title: The Essence of Moral Education Author(s): Bernice Lerner, School of Education, Boston University Abstract: Guided by the works of great philosophers and storytellers, gain a deeper understanding of educators’ most important mission, i.e., to help students develop powers of ethical thinking, and habits and dispositions that lead to wise and responsible choices. Learn why moral education involves more than a single course, a quick-fix program, or slogans posted on a bulletin board. Discover how to mine sources of wisdomfrom both within and beyond the academic curriculum to engage students in lively discourse and active learning, to assist them in forging meaningful lives. Workshop 4 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 907 Title: Prospects for Coexistence: Religion, Identity, and Belonging in a Changing World Author(s): Diane Moore, Harvard Divinity School Adam Strom, Facing History and Ourselves James W. Fraser, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: Using a range of case studies from schools in Europe, the United States, Pakistan, and Kenya, the workshop will explore the particular challenges and opportunities that religious diversity presents to education and the construction of healthy civil societies in a variety of cultural contexts. Through our discussions we will move beyond particular representations to larger questions of the best ways to create respectful, cosmopolitan, and religiously pluralistic civil societies that can both sustain and be fostered by primary and secondary schools. Workshop 5 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 909 Title: Scoring Moral Narratives and Measuring Moral Development Author(s): Michael Lamport Commons, Harvard Medical School Sara Nora Ross, Acting / Researching / Integrating Network Associates, Inc. Terri Lee Robinett, College of the Desert 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 3 of 134 Patrice Marie Miller, Harvard Medical School Abstract: “Applying the Model of Hierarchical Complexity to Scoring Moral Narratives and Constructing Instruments to Measure Moral Development” This workshop addresses two forms of measurement of moral development and a framework for evaluating specific interventions. The Hierarchical Complexity Scoring System is applied to the construction of instruments with consent of the user’s preference and to the scoring of narratives. Those attending the workshop will learn about 1) the model, 2) the concepts underlying the model, 3) the description of the stages and their relationship to Kegan’s and Kohlberg’s stages, 4) steps involved in universal stage transition, and 5) examples of scoring samples from interviews, illustrating adult development applied to using the Hierarchal Complexity Scoring System (HCSS) as a scoring aid. Workshop 6 8:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 912 Title: The Konstanz Method of Dilemma Discussion (KMDD) Author(s): Georg Lind, University of Konstanz, Germany Abstract: The Konstanz Method of Dilemma Discussion (KMDD) has emerged from the dilemma method by Moshe Blatt and Lawrence Kohlberg, and is also based on Habermas' communicative ethics, Oser's discourse method, and Lind's Dual-Aspect-Theory of moral behavior and development. In the past 20 years, new elements like counter-arguments and phases of support and challenge have been added, the role of the learner has been strengthened, and its focus has been sharpened to make it even more effective and teachable. The KMDD has strong and lasting effects on the cognitive-moral development of students of various age groups. In intervention studies, very high effect sizes were found (gains of 20 out of 100 C-points; r > 0.70). This workshop will introduce the three main didactical principles of the KMDD, a blueprint for a dilemma discussion, and guide lines for writing one’s own dilemmas. Workshop 7 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Voices Reading: A Comprehensive Reading and Character Development Program Author(s): Patrick C. Walker, Zaner-Bloser Voices Programs Co-author(s): Catherine Snow, Harvard Graduate School of Education Robert Selman, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: This workshop will present case studies (including videotapes) of students using the Voices Reading curriculum over a one year period. Voices Reading is a K-5 comprehensive reading program that fully integrates character education into the teaching of reading and writing. Participants will be introduced to the curriculum and participate in 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 4 of 134 core character development activities. The adult development of teachers will also be analyzed with respect to their ability to teach core character development activities. Longitudinal and case study data will be analyzed to study the relationships between the growth in moral development, student achievement, and student behavior. Workshop 8 9:00 am-12:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Training (REST) Workshop Author(s): Lauren Rogers-Sirin, Drew University Selcuk R. Sirin, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: The U.S. Department of Education (2001) states that in 2000, 39% of public school students belonged to a minority group, representing a 17% increase from 1972, and that the immigrant population nearly tripled from 1970 to 2000. It also predicted that the proportion of students who are considered racial, ethnic, or language minority students would continue to rise in the next several decades. On the other hand, 90% of teachers who work with these children are predominantly White and 81% are between the ages of 45 and 60 (National Education Association, 1997). Schools are burdened with the double challenge of finding teachers who are trained to successfully teach a diverse student population and dealing with an anticipated shortage of teachers in general in the next decade. Researchers and professional organizations continue to emphasize a great need for school professionals to be sensitive to the special needs of diverse students and the adverse academic and social effects of intolerance and discrimination within educational settings. The Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Training (REST) Workshop is designed to address precisely these needs by providing a hands-on training for current and future school professionals to promote cultural competence as an ethical requirement for teaching professionals. 12:00 pm-1:30 pm LUNCH (on your own) Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 1:30 pm - 2:45 pm Session 1 1:30 pm -2:45 pm Room: 903 Papers #47 Title: The Cosmopolitan Solution: Political Lessons from Nineteenth Century Education Reformers Author(s): Chris Anderson, University of Hartford Abstract: This is a consideration of the rhetorical strategy of an earlier successful educational reform movement: the mid-nineteenth century American common school movement led by the “Friends of Education.” While the Friends were generally Whiggish 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 5 of 134 in politics and liberal in religion, they sought to avoid the rhetorics of party politics and sectarian controversy by moving discussion of education outside of these spheres, developing what they called a “cosmopolitan” rhetoric of education. They also developed new institutions to bring the reform message directly to practicing teachers and teachers in training. These strategies have direct relevance to moral education advocates of our day. Title: Dialogue and Conflict of Cultures Author(s): Yu-hui Chen, Institute of Teacher Education, National Chengchi University, Taiwan Abstract: Hegel interprets world history as dialectically moving from the East to the West, with the spirit of Chinese philosophy remaining at the first moment; this spirit is the “immediate unity” and lacks individual self-consciousness and mediation. The author hopes that through this article the meanings of “reason,” “subjectivity,” and “self-consciousness” in the development of world history can be further elucidated. Do Hegel’s Universal History and Fukuyama’s The End of History both fall into the myth of “Rationalism” and “Monism” and ignore the subjectivity of the “others” that post-modern scholars are striving to eliminate? Title: Cosmopolitan Ethics and the Cultivation of the Moral Resources Author(s): Dale T. Snauwaert, Center for Nonviolence and Democratic Education, Judith Herb College of Education, University of Toledo Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature and cultivation of the internal moral resources required to enact a cosmopolitan ethic. The moral resources are capacities and dispositions of consciousness and of natural human inclination that enhance our capacity to morally respond to others. While a rational understanding of the principles of ethics is essential, the development and actualization of particular moral resources is necessary for securing respect and care for human dignity in the human community. The paper articulates and defends these capacities in the context of a cosmopolitan ethic as basic goals of global civic education. Session 2 1:30 pm-2:45 pm Room: 905 Papers #40 Title: A Conceptual Framework For Teaching Ethics in a Pluralistic Society Author(s): Miriam Orkar, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada Abstract: Almost everyone thinks ethics should be taught in schools. However, moral education experts are often not in agreement about which ethical values should be taught, in a pluralistic society. This is because what may be considered ethical by a certain group of people may not be considered ethical by another group of people. The author’s central claim is that there is a basic moral principle, which appeal to people of all color and 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 6 of 134 creed. Respect for human dignity is not only considered to be a universal moral principle, it is also considered to be the highest moral principle, among many philosophers and moral educators. To respect human dignity in all persons means to respect human dignity in oneself (self-respect) and to respect human dignity in others (respect-for-persons). Excerpts of lessons on self-respect and respect-for-persons are included in the paper. A discussion of the authors experience in sharing ethical values with youths in her neighborhood, through the “NeboReach Youth Project,” is also included as an Appendix. Title: Plurality as the Heart of Ethics, in Community and Curriculum Author(s): Simon Robinson, Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds, United Kingdom Abstract: The paper argues that plurality is central to ethical reflection and practice. Engaging plurality within and beyond the community involves enabling critique of that community and a sharing of responsibility around practice that makes a difference to members, partners and the wider community. This moves beyond either tolerance or practical wisdom, requiring commitment to the other and the shared project, leading to creative transformation. Plurality in the curriculum often works against this dynamic, with different cognate areas of value and ethics demanding their own space. The paper examines pedagogies that can make the connections, through an ethics of critical hermeneutic. Title: Professional Ethics, Pluralism, and the “Rationality of Traditions” Author(s): Daniel Vokey, Faculty of Education, University of British Colombia, Canada Abstract: The citizens of pluralistic societies such as the US and Canada have very different and sometimes incompatible moral standpoints representing a wide range of cultural, philosophical, religious, and/or political traditions. If there is no “tradition-neutral” perspective from which to engage ethical issues in a pluralistic society, then from what perspective(s) should instructors teach professional ethics courses for educators? The paper examines whether this question can be answered by drawing upon MacIntyre’s arguments in Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry that “post-liberal” educators should commit to defend both their own traditions and the conditions of productive discourse across deep disagreement. Session 3 1:30 pm-2:45 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Symposium #73 Title: Moral Emotions in Childhood and Adolescence and Their Role in Moral Education Discussant: Dan Lapsley, University of Notre Dame Chair: Tina Malti, University of Zurich, Switzerland Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 7 of 134 The symposium analyses the development of moral emotions in childhood and adolescence. The first presentation investigates the role of moral emotions in the development of a moral self in childhood. The second presentation examines how moral emotions and moral reasoning interrelate and affect children’s prosocial behavior. The third presentation analyses how adolescents' meta-cognitive understanding of morality contributes to the coordination process of moral knowledge and moral emotions. Overall, the symposium contributes to our understanding of how moral emotions develop in childhood and adolescence, and the implications of the findings for moral education are discussed. Title: Moral Emotions in Middle Childhood: Foundations for the Development of the Moral Self Author(s): Bryan Sokol, St. Louis University Abstract: In current theorizing about “moral selfhood”, children’s emotion attributions play a central role in determining the level to which moral rules have been integrated into the self-system. As compelling as this account has become, there remain several critical issues needing further clarification. The present paper begins to address some of these, including: 1) how self begins to develop in childhood; 2) what role perspective-taking has in the self-integration process; 3) what sorts of behavioral outcomes are associated with moral emotion attributions; and, 4) how this approach can be used to design moral education programs. Title: Children’s Moral Emotions, Moral Reasoning, and Prosocial Behavior Author(s): Tina Malti, University of Zurich, Switzerland Abstract: This study investigated the role of moral emotions (i.e. sympathy and moral emotion attributions within the happy victimizer paradigm) and moral reasoning in children’s prosocial behavior. Representative cross-sectional data of six-year-old kindergarten children were used to examine this rationale. The findings document that sympathy is positively associated with prosocial behavior, whereas moral emotions as attributed to the self-as-victimizers and moral reasoning in the context of emotion attributions moderated the relationship between sympathy and prosocial behavior. The findings suggest complex interactions between affective-motivational and cognitive dimensions of morality in children’s prosocial behavior, and the implications for pedagogical interventions are discussed. Title: “It Can't Be Right What Feels Wrong”: The Coordination of Moral Emotion Expectancies and Moral Judgment in Adolescence Author(s): Tobias Krettenauer, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada Abstract: This study expands research on the "happy victimizer phenomenon" by analyzing the coordination process of moral emotion expectancies and moral judgment in adolescence. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 8 of 134 It is demonstrated that a subjectivist meta-ethical understanding of moral judgments that, typical for adolescents, promotes the coordination process of judgment and emotions. In the course of adolescent development moral emotion expectancies become an important source of moral judgments. The finding points out that greater attention should be devoted to the interaction of judgment and emotions in the course of development, both in theory and practice. Session 4 1:30 pm -2:45 pm Room: 802 Symposium # 55 Title: Urban School Reform: Three “Social Justice” Efforts to Engage Students Discussant: Steven Becton, Facing History and Ourselves Chair: Anna L. Romer, Facing History and Ourselves Abstract: Three high and extreme poverty urban schools—two high school level and one middle school—have all chosen Facing History and Ourselves (FHAO), which engages students in complex studies of prejudice reduction, social justice and participation in democracy as a key dimension to their school-wide efforts to transform teaching and learning. These papers will explore the divergent ways the three principals have mobilized FHAO to strengthen their students’ sense of agency, academic achievement, understanding of citizenship and participation in democracy, as well as the ways in which it has been more challenging to do so. Title: Strengthening Students’ Voices and Engagement in a Chicago Middle School Author(s): Anna L. Romer, Facing History and Ourselves Abstract: This Latino middle school in Chicago has engaged a set of civic and moral education materials and methods—Facing History and Ourselves—to combat academic underachievement and student disaffection. Intensive and ongoing professional development of almost all staff and dynamic leadership on the part of the principal have begun to reinvigorate teaching and learning in this extreme poverty school (96% free or reduced lunch). The paper will report on interviews, classroom observations, and objective data regarding school climate in a discussion on how infusion of Facing History has changed the school, as well as ongoing challenges to educating students living in poverty. Title: Citizenship School Theme Promotes College Bound Critical Thinkers Author(s): Meredith Gavrin, New Haven Academy Abstract: New Haven Academy (NHA) is an Inter-district Magnet School in the New Haven system that also draws 35% of its students from the surrounding suburbs. NHA seeks to provide a rigorous education that prepares all students to succeed in college and become 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 9 of 134 active citizens. With 70% of the students on free or reduced lunch, this is a high-poverty school. Presentation will discuss how program engages students in complex studies of prejudice reduction, social justice and participation in democracy using Facing History and Ourselves to achieve its academic success and 100% college acceptance rate of first graduating class. Title: Civic Learning and Small School Reform: Theory and Practice Author(s): Dennis J. Barr, Facing History and Ourselves Abstract: This paper will examine how a small school founded in 2005, has used an innovative program to conceptualize how core notions of social responsibility, civic engagement, and participation can be infused throughout the school, both in terms of academics and school life. The program, Facing History and Ourselves, provides the core principles, content and pedagogy that guided the curricula, instructional practices, student support systems, and the design of opportunities for student civic involvement. This paper uses qualitative research on students’ experience of the school to explore the innovations and challenges that have sprung from this work. Session 5 1:30 pm-2:45 pm Room: 907 Papers #26 Title: Understanding Suffering: The Need for Service-Learning in Ethical Education Author(s): Katherine Kirby, St. Michael’s College Abstract: For Emmanuel Levinas, French Postmodern ethicist, the authority on whom one necessarily depends for any instruction about suffering can only be the person who suffers herself. Only she is able to reveal her pain and need. Based upon this idea, I argue that Service-Learning experiences in colleges and universities are invaluable, and perhaps necessary, for any curriculum aiming toward the development of ethical understanding, personal moral character and commitment, and/or conscientious citizenship, both local and global. Further, I see no reason why the same could not be said regarding secondary and even elementary education, as appropriate, of course, to age-level. Title: From Serving to Learning: Using Reflection to Facilitate Growth in College Author(s): First Author: Debora L. Liddell, The University of Iowa Co-author(s): Steven Hubbard, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 10 of 134 The purpose of this paper is to review the literature on reflection as a process to both facilitate and assess cognitive and moral development in college students involved in service learning. In particular, we will briefly examine the work of King and Kitchener (reflective judgment theory), Kegan and Baxter Magolda (self authorship), and Noddings (moral conversation), and make recommendations for reflection experiences designed to facilitate and assess cognitive and moral growth. Title: Catalyzing a Commitment to Service-Work in Emerging Adults Author(s): Scott Seider, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Interviews with college students committed to volunteer work reveal that a majority of these students can point to a single academic experience that deeply influenced their commitment to service-work. These experiences typically occur during the freshman year of college and can lead to a replacement, modification or specification of the students’ existing worldviews. Here, the paper draws upon identity theory and emerging adult theory to offer a model that demonstrates the role of these ‘frame-changing experiences’ in catalyzing a young adult’s commitment to service-work. Session 6 1:30 pm-2:45 pm Room: 909 Papers #80 Title: Documenting the Relationship Among Moral Judgment Phases and Attributional Complexity First Author: W. Pitt Derryberry, Western Kentucky University Second Author: Chris Chandler, Western Kentucky University Third Author: Ian Love, Western Kentucky University Abstract: This study addresses how moral judgment developmental phases of consolidation and transition relate to attributional complexity. In two samples of college students, no differences in attributional complexity existed in comparisons of those operating from differing moral judgment schemata. However, consolidated participants were significantly advanced over transitional participants in attributional complexity. Furthermore, when consolidated and transitional phases were accounted for at each moral judgment schema, further trends were noted. In addition to illustrating that attributional complexity peaks during consolidated phases, the findings affirm the predictive power and overall utility of consolidated and transitional phases of moral judgment development. Title: Toward a New Vocabulary in Moral Development Theory: Articulating Models to Cataclysmic Transformations in Theory and Practice Author(s): Dawn Schrader, Cornell University 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 11 of 134 Abstract: This paper begins an examination of the three primary components of inquiry in moral psychology, calling for and proposing new ways to examine the primary questions of our field: What is the process of moral development and transformation? How do we educate to promote moral development? What is the relationship between moral judgment and moral action? The paper first takes the perspective of critiquing the current descriptions of both stage development and stage change explanations, and then proposes a new model and new language for exploring each of these three components of moral theory. Title: Peer Influence, Religious Beliefs and Ethical Conduct Among Adolescents Author: Leslie K. Grier, California State University, Fullerton Co-author(s): Wendy Gudiel, California State University, Fullerton Abstract: In this research, the impact of religious beliefs and peer influence on adolescent conduct is examined. The significance of peer influence on adolescent outcomes is well documented and more often than not, framed as a risk factor. Perceived or actual risk behaviors of friends have been found to be solid predictors of adolescent behaviors. In contrast, religiosity among adolescents is construed as a protective factor whereas diverse measures of religiosity have been associated with positive developmental outcomes. In this study an attempt is made to parse the relative influence of peers to religiosity with respect to pro and anti-social behaviors. Session 7 1:30 pm-2:45 pm Room: 914 Symposium # 62 Title: Pathei Mathos: Suffering, Identity and Moral Education Author(s): Avi Mintz, Teachers College, Columbia University Rodino Anderson, Bowdoin College James Stillwaggon, Iona College Abstract: The stability of childhood as a category of educational thought highlights the radical transformation, or loss of childhood, necessary to achieving moral adulthood. At the same time, the Progressive tradition’s focus on childhood experience heightens our awareness of this loss. Where these concerns intersect stands the child’s suffering as a necessary educational condition. These papers examine suffering as the destabilizing of identity necessary for learning to occur. Drawing upon Western educational intellectual history, we focus on the ways in which the child or student suffers in becoming a subject of a moral order. Title: Plato and the Tragedians on the Pains of Moral Development Author(s): Avi Mintz, Teachers College, Columbia University 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 12 of 134 Abstract: This paper examines the work of Plato and the Greek Tragedians to identify four ways that pain contributes to moral development. First, suffering at the suffering of another cultivates compassion. Second, the painful recognition of one’s own moral failing may contribute to moral development. Third, pain may be a by-product of any new moral orientation. Fourth, pain might be experienced as one struggles to form one’s moral identity. Title: Hegel and the Moral Curriculum of Images Author(s): Rodino Anderson, Bowdoin College Abstract: Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit provides a curriculum of consciousness attempting to harmonize concept (Begriff) with image (Bild), but inevitably discovering that the two cannot be reconciled. Hegel terms this frustrating project, “the way of despair,” because through it consciousness comes to its mature understanding of freedom. Character education toward freedom necessitates a curriculum allowing concept and image to negate one another: the phenomenological experience of moral discomfort. Moral discomfort is nothing to be added to the curriculum, but can be extrapolated through play theory from the educational narratives (fairy tales) used to socialize children. Children must “play” with painful dilemmas to gain an understanding of freedom. Title: The Weakness of the Child: Orwell on Suffering and Education Author(s): James Stillwaggon, Iona College Abstract: George Orwell’s “Such, Such Were the Joys” describes his painful formal and social education at the hands of teachers, administrators and fellow students too caught up in the life of Edwardian England to notice its imminent collapse. While most of the essay is spent detailing particular sufferings, he closes with a general statement about the suffering of childhood in relation to adult moral laws. Using this statement in relation to the expectations of happiness in childhood, I argue that the idealization of childhood serves as a balance to the suffering involved in becoming an adult. Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 3:00 pm - 4:15 pm Session 8 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 912 Symposium #86 Title: Social Understanding, Trust, and Commitment in Democracy Chair(s): Seana Moran, Stanford Center on Adolescence, Stanford University 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 13 of 134 Abstract: Democracy is a process of community self-rule. The number of different perspectives— and thus the complexity of democracy—increases in societies that incorporate diverse cultures. How people interact with each other, through social understanding, trust, and commitment, become more important with diversity because fewer norms, ideas, or tenets may be taken for granted. In this symposium, we draw on literature syntheses and studies with children, teens, and adults to elaborate what these three concepts entail, how they affect each other, what benefits and risks they present for democracy, and how educators and leaders might pursue their development to support democracy. Title: Social Understanding in Democracy Author(s): Katie Davis, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: This presentation discusses the role of social understanding in creating a democratic society that respects and values diversity. Using qualitative data from studies with elementary school children, I discuss how social understanding develops over time, is rooted in one’s own personal experiences, and influences how well children comprehend important historical democracy-enhancing events such as the Civil Rights Movement. This presentation has implications for educational programs that aim to teach civic engagement, democratic values, and/or cross-cultural understanding. Title: Trust in Democracy Author(s): Amy Dray, University of California, Los Angeles Abstract: This presentation argues for the need to cultivate youth’s prudent trust judgments in order to maintain a viable democracy. Trust is essential in today's complex world, as each of us must rely on others for information and services. At the same time, our Constitution is based on an inherent skepticism of government, and a certain amount of distrust seems necessary to hold governments and officials accountable. Thus, trust and distrust each has a role to play in a democratic society. How might we define these roles in order to teach young people to trust and distrust wisely? Title: Commitment in Democracy Author(s): Seana Moran, Stanford Center on Adolescence, Stanford University Abstract: This presentation provides an interdisciplinary model of commitment and investigates how an educational focus on commitment may stimulate opportunities for better civic engagement. Commitment involves how individuals invest their personal resources in other people, groups, ideas. Commitment stabilizes relations among people and people’s behavior over time. But commitment can also undermine democracy through injudicious placement of resources, dogmatism, or fundamentalism. Interacting with people who hold different commitments brings to light our own. Increasing diversity, then, may provide an opportunity to make more considered commitments to support democracy. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 14 of 134 Session 9 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 903 Papers #28 Title: A Case for Educating Against Hate Speech Author(s): Kim Hyunjung, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Abstract: Hate speech, defined as communicative acts intended to intimidate and subordinate individuals who belong to historically marginalized groups, causes substantial harms, although it is considered protected speech. While hate speech has been in the center of debates involving two conflicting democratic values, freedom and equality, this paper argues that equality should be placed at forefront in addressing hate speech in the K-12 public schools. For hate speech negates the principle of equality, and public schools should be an environment in which every student should be treated equally regardless of their race, gender, creed, or sexual orientation. Title: Civil Civic Dialogue Across “Enemy” Lines Author(s): Gerri Perreault, University of Northern Iowa Abstract: “If you want to make peace, you don’t talk to your friends. You talk to your enemies” (Moshe Dayan, Israeli general & politician 1915-1981). This presentation is an overview of the conceptual underpinnings as well as the practical implementation of the “Civil Civic Discourse and Opposing Views” series sponsored by the American Democracy Project (ADP) at the University of Northern Iowa (UNI). ADP is part of a national project sponsored by the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. The presentation will include the purposes of this series, the outcomes expected, the different assumptions underlying debate vs. dialogue, and the relationship between dialogue and a relational conception of leaders and leadership. Title: Hate Words and “Multiculturalism as Crap”: Discomfort, Resistance, Barriers, Ethics Author(s): Tom Wilson, School of Education, Chapman University Abstract: This session focuses on two classroom incidents that occurred within the School of Education (SOE), Chapman University and how faculty and education students responded. Both cases were situated in courses whose purpose was to have potential teachers examine the ways by which large numbers of subordinate groups are marginalized, disenfranchised, and silenced. After describing the facts of the cases, questions that confronted the SOE will be presented for participant analysis. Particular attention will be paid to (1) issues of student discomfort, resistance and barriers to learning and (2) policy centering on ethical criteria for admission to the teaching profession. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 15 of 134 Session 10 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 905 Papers # 37 Title: Character in Teaching Author(s): David Carr, Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh, Scotland Abstract: Arguably, qualities of personal character play a significant role in the professional conduct of teachers. It is often said that we remember teachers for their qualities of character, and some kinds of professional expertise may themselves be understood as qualities of character. After roughly distinguishing qualities of character from those of personality, the present paper proceeds to a distinctive account of the role and status of character in professional life and expertise and then concludes with some observations about the professional education or cultivation of character. Title: Fostering and Connecting Teachers’ Spiritual Moral Commitments Author(s): Ramona Cutri, Brigham Young University Abstract: Conceptual framework ranging from critical pedagogy to the moral dimensions of education each attempt to ground teachers’ thinking in the ethics of teaching in a pluralistic society. Such frameworks focus teachers’ attention on the magnanimous constructs of social justice and preparing the young for a democracy. Yet, often these notions are not part of a teacher’s mind-set, or private theory. For some teachers, these notions may remain mere intellectual commitments (public theory). A small sample of data will illustrate the potential of efforts to connect teachers’ private spiritual beliefs to the public agenda of moral education. Session 11 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 914 Symposium #66: Title: Effects of the EQUIP Peer-Helping Program Discussant: John C. Gibbs, Ohio State University Chair: Daniel Brugman, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Abstract: EQUIP is a multicomponent program, which is intended to encourage and equip youth to think and act responsibly using a peer-helping approach. The program aims to reduce externalizing behaviour problems by decreasing self-serving cognitive distortions, improving social skills, and stimulating moral development. Different versions of the program are currently applied with different target groups (juvenile and adult delinquents, adolescents with behaviour problems) and in different settings (correctional facilities, ambulant care, high schools). In this symposium effects of the EQUIP program are presented in mainstream secondary schools using EQUIP for Educators and in correctional facilities using specific adaptations of EQUIP. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 16 of 134 Title: An Investigation of the Impact of a Psychoeducational Intervention Program for Behaviourally At-Risk Students: EQUIP For Educators Author(s): Ann-Marie DiBiase, Faculty of Education, Brock University, Canada Abstract: Increasing numbers of students are coming to school who already possess well-developed patterns of aggressive, oppositional, and disruptive behaviour. This study examines the effectiveness of a multi-component psychoeducational intervention program (EQUIP for Educators—EFE) for behaviorally at-risk students. A quasi-experimental 2 x 2 x 2 repeated measures MANOVA was conducted. Subjects (n = 45) aged 10.1 - 11. 8 years (M = 10.9) participated in this 15-week study. Results indicated that the EQUIP treatment group evinced less anger/aggression, more positive social skills, and more sophisticated social-decision sociomoral reasoning than the control group at the posttest period. Title: EQUIP for Educators in Spain: Results from a Pilot Intervention in Secondary Schools First Author: Kevin van der Meulen, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain Co-author(s): Laura Granizo, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain Cristina del Barrio, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain Abstract: In our paper we will present results from our pilot study using EQUIP for Educators (DiBiase, Gibbs & Potter, 2005) in Spain. We named the program EQUIPAR and adapted it to the Spanish secondary school context. Two classes of students (aged 14-17; n=40) were trained in anger management/thinking error correction, social skills and social decision making. We evaluated their progress in these aspects and compared the results with data obtained from two control groups (n=48). In the second place, we tested the influence of EQUIPAR on the group’s moral atmosphere. Finally, as we were interested in using the program for the prevention of bullying and social exclusion, we measured its incidence before and after the training. Title: The Preventive Effects of EQUIP for Educators on Moral Cognitions and Behavior First Author: Floor van der Velden, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Co-author(s): Daniel Brugman, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Jan Boom, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Willem Koops, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Abstract: A quasi-experimental pre-test/ post-test study was conducted to investigate the effects of EQUIP for Educators on moral judgment, cognitive distortions, social skills, moral atmosphere and antisocial behavior of at risk, low-education adolescents. EQUIP for 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 17 of 134 Educators is a prevention program, designed to decrease moral judgment delay, social information-processing deficits and social skill deficiencies. Participants were students between the ages of 13 and 16 years from both highly urbanised and rural schools. A total of about 425 adolescents participated in the control group and about 300 adolescents from the same schools participated in the experimental group. Pre-test/post-test results and effect sizes will be presented. Title: Responsible Adult Culture: A Case Study of Cognitive and Behavioral Changes at a Community-Based Correctional Facility First Author: Renee S. Devlin, Ohio State University Co-author(s): John C. Gibbs, Ohio State University Abstract: This article provides a case study of Responsible Adult Culture (RAC), a cognitivebehavioral group treatment program in use at the Franklin County Community-Based Correctional Facility. A treatment aim of RAC is to induce cognitive change (e.g., to reduce cognitive distortions) and thereby to promote responsible conduct. The participants in the program (76 male and female adult offenders) evidenced both cognitive and behavioral gains. Furthermore, the cognitive gains correlated with one measure (risk level) of the behavioral gains. This correlation suggested that the behavioral gains were attributable to RAC. Effect sizes were comparable to prior outcome evaluations of RAC’s parent program, EQUIP, and will be presented. Title: Restorative Education and EQUIP in Juvenile Delinquents First Author: Micha de Winter, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Co-author(s): Daniel Brugman, Utrecht University, The Netherlands Abstract: To strengthen the effects of the EQUIP intervention in juvenile delinquents, EQUIP was combined with Restorative Education. Restorative Education is a Dutch experimental program for young offenders. Its main goal is the restoration of citizenship, by educating the youngsters about the consequences of their anti-social behaviour for their victims and for society, and by helping them to repair the harm they have caused. In a quasiexperimental study the effects of EQUIP and Restorative Education were investigated. Two highly similar closed reception facilities for juvenile delinquents participated in the research with a total of 114 male participants (aged 13-20 years). Effects were measured on moral development, empathy and egocentrism. Session 12 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 907 Papers # 18 Title: The Mathematics of Moral Education: Creating Conditions for Profound Empathy Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 18 of 134 Bridget Cooper, Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds, United Kingdom Abstract: This paper considers the hidden curriculum in education and the mathematics of human interaction in moral development. Based on research which analysed observations of around sixty teaching sessions with students from age five to eighteen in the UK and interviews with the sixteen teachers, selected for their empathy, it provides an analysis of different types of empathy, fundamental, relative, profound and feigned. It considers the constraints in educational institutions which limit the development of profound empathy, as well as strategies to enhance its development and discusses the implications for the moral order both in education and the wider world. Title: The “New” New Civics: Exploring Empathy Through a Video Game Author(s): James Diamond, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: I will discuss a proposal for my dissertation research in which I will explore how students develop skills associated with historical empathy as they play an educational video game entitled Peacemakers. In order to win, students must consider the perspectives of many groups if they are to achieve their support in the quest for peace. I will administer preand post-intervention instruments in order to gauge changes in empathy, but the study will be primarily interpretive, as I will focus on the discussion that occurs between students as they play the game, as well as on their responses during interviews. Title: Empathy as Intersubjectivity: Resolving Hume and Smith’s Divide Author(s): Matthew Schertz, Pennsylvania State University, Berks Abstract: Although empathy is arguably an important factor to consider in moral education, the concept itself has consistently stood on tenuous ground. In this essay, I claim that our adherence to ontological dualism and discrete subjectivity have problematized our comprehension of empathy. I propose that our understanding is limited by our perception of selfhood. If the self were defined as intersubjective, along the lines of Merleau-Ponty, then empathy’s ambiguities would dissipate. After reconceptualizing empathy in light of intersubjectivity, I call for pedagogical relations that are aligned with developmental research, which provides further support for adhering to an alternative conception of the phenomenon. Session 13 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 802 Symposium #68 Title: Middle School Moral Development: Climate, Discourse and Teacher Efficacy Chair(s): Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 19 of 134 Linking together two research paradigms, we address the influence of both academic climate and social climate on student moral character in middle school. We report on data from both public and Catholic schools in the first paper. In the second paper, we analyzed teacher discourse in 5th grade Catholic school classrooms to measure instructional, social and ethical content, in relation to student effects. In the third paper, we developed a new measure of teacher moral efficacy in order to understand how teacher moral self-efficacy affects classroom practices and classroom climate. Title: Middle School Academic and Social Climate Influences on Moral Character First Author: Vladimir Khmelkov, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Julianne C. Turner, University of Notre Dame Jenny Vaydich, University of Notre Dame Andrea Christensen, University of Notre Dame Abstract: We examined the influence of both academic and social climate on moral development in samples from public and Catholic schools. Learning climate was measured as perceptions of academic goal structures; both mastery and performance. We examined social climate by measuring perceptions of teacher connectedness, expectations and engagement as well as student connectedness. To examine moral character we tested empathy, knowledge of ethical goodness, citizenship, and attitudes towards cheating. OLS regressions indicated strong relations between both types of climate variables and character measures in both samples. Title: Teacher Discourse and Its Relation to Moral Character Authors: Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Julianne C. Turner, University of Notre Dame Gayle Mullen, Midwestern University Abstract: Teacher discourse about learning and achievement are associated with cognitive and affective outcomes, including effort and belongingness, and with ethical development, such as concern for others. The discourse of four middle school teachers was examined: two whose classrooms scored low and two whose classrooms scored high on student perceptions of classroom climate. We coded discourse for academic motivation, social climate and ethical climate. Ethical and motivational discourse was more prevalent in the highest scoring classroom. The lowest scoring classrooms had more negative discourse. Teacher discourse and practice that promote intrinsic motivation to learn overlap with those that promote ethical behavior. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 20 of 134 Title: A New Scale for Measuring Teacher Moral Efficacy Authors: Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Vladimir Khmelkov, University of Notre Dame Jenny Vaydich, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Teachers with high instructional self-efficacy manage the classroom differently from teachers with low teaching self-efficacy (Gibson & Dembo, 1984). Although there is much discussion in teacher education about what leads to high instructional self-efficacy, little is known about teacher moral development efficacy. The Teacher Moral Efficacy Measure (TMEM) followed standard scale developmental procedures. The TMEM has good construct validity and predicted higher scores on attitudes more successful teachers hold—mastery learning, efficacy for promoting positive relationships and for helping students learn. Session 14 3:00 pm-4:15 pm Room: 909 Papers #25 Title: Linking Professionalism with Ethical Capacities Author(s): Muriel J. Bebeau, School of Dentistry, University of Minnesota Abstract: Two concerns are evident in the professional ethics education literature. One, similar to the debate in elementary and secondary education, is whether to focus on the development of a physician’s character or on reasoning and problem solving capacities (Kenny & Shelton, 2006). A second (Stern, 2006) shifts the debate from questions of character or ethical competence to a concern for simple adherence to appropriate behaviors. This study links the two by demonstrating a relationship between deficiencies in professionalism observed during medical school with shortcomings in capacities evident in dentists disciplined by a licensing board. Implications for professional ethics education are discussed. Title: Sense and Act: Assessing Ethical Sensitivity, Reasoning, and Implementation in Resident Physicians Author(s): Danielle King, School of Medicine, New York University Sean Cavanaugh, School of Medicine, New York Univerisity Adina Kalet, School of Medicine, New York University Abstract: Ethical practice is central to the daily functioning of physicians. Recently, competence in ethical behavior has become a topic of increasing scrutiny for the regulatory bodies that oversee medical education. There exists little data in the medical literature regarding methods for assessing competence in ethical behavior in medical trainees. In our study, we seek to describe baseline measures of ethical sensitivity, reasoning, and implementation of first-year medical residents. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 21 of 134 Roundtables 5:45 pm - 7:00 pm Roundtable -301 5:45 pm -7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Classroom Relationships: Preparation for Living Respectfully in the World? Author(s): D. Kay Johnston, Colgate University Abstract: This discussion will focus on the connection between respectful ways of living in a classroom and respectful ways of living in the world. We will ask the question: are developing classroom relationships a grounding for civic and moral education and a preparation for thinking of oneself as responsible in a world outside the classroom? If teachers help their students think about themselves as not only individuals achieving academically, but also as people in relationship with their classmates, are they teaching for social justice? Rountable-302 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Taiwan’s Civic Education: Based on the Dialectic between Globalization and Localization Author(s): Chou-Sung Yang, Institute of Curriculum Instruction and Technology, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan Abstract: Through the theoretical approach, this paper aims at inquiring into the practices and problems of civic education under the dialectic between globalization and localization in Taiwan. First, it starts with a research for the ideas and development of globalization and localization. Second, it outlines a developmental history of civic education in Taiwan, and then examines the incoming problems and challenges facing the dialectics between globalization and localization. At last, it suggests that ‘glocalization’ is the important core conception to reconstruct the curriculum and teaching of civic education in Taiwan. Rountable-303 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Teachers’ Sensitivity to Social Justice: Beliefs and Practice Author(s): Mary Louise Arnold, University of Toronto, Canada Co-authors: Dwight Boyd, University of Toronto, Canada Abstract: In this paper we report on part of a larger study entitled “Making Commitments to Social Justice: Adolescents’ and Teachers’ Perspectives.” As context, we will first briefly describe the conceptual rationale and overall aims of the larger project. We will then focus in greater detail on the critical first-step of exploring teachers’ sensitivity to social justice. We will describe our methodology and report findings pertaining to patterns of 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 22 of 134 association between teachers’ beliefs about such concerns and their commitment to them in the context of their educational practice. Finally, we will discuss the implications of these findings for moral education. Roundtable-304 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Packaging Boyhood: Masculinity, Media, and Moral Education Author(s): Lyn Mikel Brown, Colby College Co-author(s): Mark B. Tappan, Colby College Sharon Lamb, Saint Michael's College Abstract: The purpose of this presentation is to consider the role that the media (particularly film and television) play in perpetuating both a very limited conception of masculinity and a profound sense of male privilege and entitlement that fuels, at least in part, the current “boy crisis” in US schools and colleges, and contributes to violence, substance abuse, and civic disengagement among an increasing number of young men in our society. Participants will consider examples of mediated messages aimed at boys and young men, and discuss strategies that parents and teachers can employ to help boys and young men resist these messages. Rountable-305 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Factors Influencing Moral Development in Professional Education First Author: Trevor S. Harding, California Polytechnic State University Co-author(s): Cynthia J. Finelli, Center for Research on Learning and Teaching, University of Michigan Donald D. Carpenter, Lawrence Technological University Matthew J. Mayhew, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: The E3 (Exploring Ethical decision-making in Engineering) Research Team is a group of engineering educators and educational researchers who have been working collaboratively to understand ethical decision-making and development in engineering undergraduates for the past seven years. Initially convened to understand the high levels of cheating self-reported by engineering undergraduates, the team has more recently begun a federally-funded project to assess the efficacy of curricular and non-curricular activities in promoting the ethical development of engineering students. This roundtable discussion will focus on both the formation of the moral self within professional education and practical considerations of ethics education within the professions. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 23 of 134 Roundtable-307 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: The Moral Judgment of Gifted Adolescents: An Exploratory Study Author(s): Ashley Lewis, University of Minnesota Abstract: The purpose of this study is to examine both the abstract and concrete moral judgment ability of gifted adolescents. Preliminary evidence suggests that gifted adolescents differ from their non-gifted peers in a variety of ways, including their ability to think about moral issues. This study investigates gifted adolescents’ use of abstract concepts, as measured by the Defining Issues Test (DIT), and use of intermediate concepts, as measured by the Adolescent Intermediate Concepts Measure (AD-ICM). Results indicate that gifted adolescents differ from their peers in both types of moral judgment, which has implications for moral education curricula. Roundtable-308 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: The Ethical Decision –Making Behavior of Advertising Executives Author(s): Diane Rutkow Persky, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: In the last two decades, the advertising industry has shifted from one that was previously populated by independently owned companies to one that resembles Big Business where a handful of publicly owned conglomerates are dominant. The emphasis has changed from creating cutting edge work and building client relationships to profitability, returning value to shareholders, and retaining clients. Today, the industry faces two major challenges, economic viability and negative perceptions due to questionable ethical behavior. This new environment often compromises the ethical decision-making abilities of advertising executives who experience ethical conflicts between their own creative and managerial beliefs, and their economic interests. The proposed paper examines the effect of corporate culture and personal factors on the ethical decision-making ability of advertising executives. Roundtable-309 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Promoting Democratic Values Across Nations: Findings from a Long-term American-Russian Partnership Author(s): John McGurgan, The Amerus Exchange, LTD Co-author(s): Tatyana V. Tsyrlina, Kursk State Medical University, Kursk, Russia; Regional Open Social Institute, Kursk, Russia Joseph Henry Rustick, The Amerus Exchange, LTD Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 24 of 134 Our presentation aims to share the goals, strategies and experiences of cooperation between American educators, Upstate New York community members, and Russian educators of Kursk. Originally informal in nature, now the contacts take place under the aegis of a non-profit organization, THE AMERUS EXCHANGE, LTD. Since 1994 organizers from both nations have tried to raise the level of mutual understanding and develop democratic ideas, principles and practices. One of the presenters, Joseph Rustick has participated in every exchange since he was 10. He will speak about how he has grown morally and emotionally through his involvement in this unique series of contacts. Roundtable-310 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 914 Title: Educating Children About Peace, Inclusive Thinking, and Nonviolent Problem Solving Author(s): Marshall Strax, College of Saint Elizabeth Abstract: The goal of this paper is to encourage a conversation based on the ideas of Carl Rogers, Mortimer Adler, R. J. Starratt, Thomas Green, Howard Zinn, and others concerning what children should be taught about peace, inclusive thinking, and nonviolent problem solving. Humanistic educators believe when given a fair and balanced education people can be counted on to make the “right” decisions. Examples of curricula and pedagogical methods which can be used to teach children informed decision making about peace, inclusive thinking, and problem solving using music, literature, art, science, and other liberal arts will be discussed. Roundtable-312 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Total Moral Education: The Outlines of the 1920s Americanization Movement Author(s): John Kenneth Press, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This paper will present the Americanization Movement as a positive model of Civic Education by looking at the life of its leader, its philosophies and teaching materials. This early 20th Century movement provided a source of guidance and harmony for the increasingly diverse and chaotic society. This widespread movement involved local communities, industry and Presidents. Together they welcomed and tried to protect immigrants. In turn they asked that the immigrants make progress towards acquiring American citizenship. English and civic lessons were used to enable their participation in America. Simultaneously, parades and public demonstrations celebrated the immigrants’ contributions to society. Roundtable-313 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Teaching for Moral Democracy: Lessons from School and University Contexts 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 25 of 134 Author(s): Tom Wilson, School of Education, Chapman University John Gunderson, School of Education, Chapman University Abstract: This proposal offers pedagogical questions in terms of both theory and practice. In what ways and by what forms of teaching/learning seem to be effective in educating for a moral democracy? How do we deal with Hedley Beare’s question “but what do I do on Monday morning?” What theoretical positioning anchors our daily practices? What is the ethical justification for the methodology we choose to use? Who is the “we” in the choosing? Examples of the struggle for democratic formation from elementary, secondary, university, community and social movement settings are all possibilities. Roundtable-314 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Implications for Moral Education Practices from the Field Author(s): Sandra K. Winn, Albany College of Pharmacy Abstract: This workshop will focus upon moral development research conducted at a progressive urban elementary school. The school has a conflict resolution forum called a Council Meeting, which is similar to Lawrence Kohlberg’s Just Community Model. Fifteen Council Meetings were recorded and analyzed to see how closely the school’s forum was to Kohlberg’s model. The research also looked at teacher and student communication to answer the question of whether moral development does occur while engaged in Council Meeting. In this workshop, the participants will hear the research results, engage in an activity based upon these and discuss any possible implications pertaining to educational environments. Roundtable-315 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: The Evolving Moral Self: Where We’ve Been and Where We’re Going Author(s): Jess Matthews Duval, Cornell University Abstract: Might the moral self develop integrated into other aspects of personality and might all adolescents, even those who do not seem to emphasize morality in their thinking, have some aspect of a moral self even if it is not the central organizing conception of their personality? To begin to address this question, I have focused on how empirical literature has considered the processes connecting moral cognition and moral action. Have our questions considered the psychological processes behind this relationship and have our methods illuminated these processes and allowed for increased understanding of how moral judgment becomes moral action? How do we enlarge the construct to consider recent work in the socio-cultural traditions (Tappan, 2000) and the contribution of the social intuitionist model (Haidt, 2001; Narvaez & Bock, 2002)? How do we (as a field) understand the relationship between moral judgment and moral action? 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 26 of 134 Roundtable-316 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Culturally-Relevant Teacher Care: Can It Be Quantified? Should We Try? Author(s): Mari Ann Roberts, Emory University Abstract: This interactive session will examine and evaluate an instrument which purports to measure practicing teachers’ beliefs about, comfort with, and actions involving teacher care as it is defined by foundational researchers in the field of care and culturally-relevant pedagogy. The researcher will discuss the results of piloting this instrument. Then together the presenter and audience will evaluate the potential questions that purport to measure this type of teacher pedagogy, debate the validity of such an instrument, and debate the possibility of measuring a morality of care. Roundtable-318 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Moral Development through Constructive Controversy Author(s): Michelle Tichy, St. Norbert College Abstract: Constructive controversy is an instructional procedure that combines cooperative learning with structured intellectual conflict. This study examined the impact of constructive controversy upon students’ morality; specifically looking at Rest’s four components of moral development and the associated sets of ethical skills. Half the participants were assigned to work individualistically on a curriculum-based moral issue and the other half were assigned to work on the same issue using the constructive controversy procedure. The constructive controversy procedure had a statistically significant positive effect on three of the four components of moral development after the two weeks of the study. Roundtable-319 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: The Moral Hero: Using Biography to Teach about Moral Development Author(s): Debora L. Liddell, The University of Iowa Abstract: What is moral courage and what does it look like in the lives of our heroes? This paper describes a classroom assignment in which graduate students read biographies of moral exemplars and applied their stories to a theory of moral development. The paper discusses the utility of social learning theory in such an assignment, describes outcomes, and shares strategies for other settings. Roundtable-320 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Using Realistic Vignettes to Teach Ethical Thinking in Psychological Research Author(s): Kathryn M. LaFontana, Sacred Heart University 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 27 of 134 Abstract: In undergraduate psychology programs, ethics is typically covered in a single class or chapter, usually in a research methods class. As a result, students are given the impression that ethical issues in psychology are limited in both scope and relevance. In the present example, a series of vignettes was created to help students think about ethical issues in a broader and more personally relevant context. Rather than using extreme hypothetical scenarios, these vignettes feature the kinds of ethical dilemmas that students may encounter as undergraduate psychology majors, which lead to greater external validity in the results of this teaching method. Roundtable-321 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Was Socrates’ Method of Moral Education Anti-Democratic? Author(s): Elly Pirocacos, The American College of Greece; The International Center for Hellenic and Mediterranean Studies, Greece Abstract: There are scores of prominent contemporary philosophers that boldly claim that the Socratic Method “is important less for its drive at moral education than for its capacity for civic education” (Rob Reich, “Confusion about the Socratic Method: Socratic Paradoxes and Contemporary Invocations of Socrates”, PES Yearbook, 1998). How is it that the very same man, practicing the same method could paradoxically be acclaimed for both his anti-democratic stance, as well as a seemingly democratic-friendly stance? Perspectives like this one are accommodated by placing emphasis on the open-endedness of Socratic dialectic inquiry, accepting Socrates’ disavowal of knowledge as sincere, and finally claiming that the method cannot after all establish more than inconsistency and hence must rest on a more fluid and regulative notion of truth. My paper presentation will take issue with arguments that aim to gloss over this Socratic paradox by inadvertently casting out of the picture Socrates’ pursuit for objective moral truth as well as his air of moral superiority. Roundtable-322 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Resources of Confucian Moral Education in a Pluralistic Global Society Author(s): Kwok Keung Lau, Faculty of Education, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Abstract: Confucian moral education could be a resource for moral education in today’s multicultural global society. Confucian morality teaches not by first assuming the existence of a God or a higher principle and then making inferences from top down, but by starting from peoples’ experiences close at hand and then moving upward and forming syntheses and principles. Confucian moral education is based on a picture of human existence closer to our common sense experience. Theoretically, Confucian morality forms an open system, which has its objectivity; universality resides at the self- 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 28 of 134 determination and authentic existence of the individual. Confucian moral principles do not necessary contradict with other moral philosophies or religions. Roundtable-324 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Seeking Cosmopolitan Citizenship: A Comparative Study of Two International Schools Author(s): Theresa B. Alviar-Martin, Emory University Abstract: This study explored the feasibility of educating youth for cosmopolitan citizenship by examining how two international schools foster learning about human rights, develop students’ recognition of diversity in communities ranging from the local to the global, and compel action in response to issues across that range (Osler & Starkey, 2005). Using mixed research methodology, I analyzed data from curriculum documents, observations of social studies classes, interviews with teachers and students, and a student survey. Preliminary findings show that participants ponder how to reconcile local and global issues, and how to define citizenship within settings characterized by a predominantly global outlook. Roundtable-325 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Changes of Concept in Global Citizenship for Taiwanese Young People Being International Volunteers Author(s): Chiau-Jen Chen, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan Abstract: The research explores the experiences of young Taiwanese international volunteers, and resulting positive influences on their concept of global citizenship. Firstly, several points of global citizenship summarized through literature review would be theoretical bases in this research. Secondly, certain Taiwanese young people who had participated in international volunteering programs, recommended by the organizations would be subjects of interviewing in this research. Finally, a special requirement is that those programs need to be held for over five years, because of the abundant experience of those organizations. Finally, some findings may develop from the in-depth interviews, which is the main method used in this research, and provide recommendations for Taiwan and other countries. Rountable-326 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Ecological Cosmopolitan and Civic Education: Taiwan’s Problems Under Globalizing Condition Author(s): Chun-Ping Wang, National Chi-Nan University, Taiwan Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 29 of 134 This article tries to construct a possible ethical foundation for ecological cosmopolitan responsibilities and consciousness. Its main purposes are as follows: firstly, to illustrate the significance of ecological thinking in human encounters with globalization; secondly, to argue theories of traditional-rational aspects based on Martha C. Nussbaum’s ideas of poetic justice and discourse of the “capability approach”; and thirdly, to explain globalizing problems in Taiwan (e.g. larger number of southeast Asian labor immigrants and transnational marriages, culturally sustainable development of indigenous minorities). Finally, the paper takes multiple and tolerant viewpoints of justice to further establish a positive ecological citizenship. Roundtable- 327 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: An Integrated Approach to Global Ethics Education Author(s): Changwoo Jeong, College of Education, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea Abstract: Controversial moral issues relating to globalization and multiculturalism raise questions that have become increasingly pressing to moral inquiry. In addition, they also require ethical caring—that is, feelings with and for the other that motivate us in natural caring. For this reason, I think that it is more profitable for practice to be based on the integrated approach to moral education in the context of globalization and multiculturalism, instead of trying to chop up global ethics education into justice and caring. Thus, this study investigates the advantages of the integrated approach to moral education in a global and multicultural age and explores basic principles and fertile conditions for applying the integrated view of global ethics education. Roundtable-328 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Creating the Ethical Inclusive Classroom Author(s): Carol Strax, Dominican College Abstract: This paper will demonstrate how preservice teachers can learn about the ethical frames of justice, caring, and critique and how these ethical frames can be interwoven (Starratt, 1994) to create an ethical classroom through experiential learning in a college course on inclusion of children with disabilities. Four group projects are used for this purpose. This paper highlights the need for and suggests the content of preservice education. Roundtable-329 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Individual Traits and Prosocial Behavior of Elementary Students in Korea Author(s): Chae-Yun Uhm, College of Education, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea Abstract: This study explores the relationship between individual traits and prosocial behaviors of 6th grade elementary students in Korea. The data for research was collected from 6th grade 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 30 of 134 students (N=158) by 8 self-reported questionnaires. It investigated the relation between individual traits and prosocial behavior. The major findings were as follows. First, cognitive traits were not significantly related to self-reported prosocial behavior; DIT for moral reasoning, cognitive IRI for role taking. Second, emotional traits such as subjective well-being (life satisfaction, positive affect, and empathy) were connected with prosocial behavior significantly. However, negative affect in subjective well-being was not. Third, self-esteem included in personal traits was related to prosocial behavior positively. Roundtable-330 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Moral Development of Teachers by Teaching Career and School Level in Korea Author(s): Hyunjoo Won, College of Education, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea Abstract: This study examines the difference of moral reasoning among teachers by teaching career and school level in Korea. It also explores the developmental transition among the subgroups on their moral reasoning. The data was collected from teachers in elementary and secondary school in Korea. In the case of pre-teachers, they were students from the college of education. One hundred fifty three teachers and thirty-four students completed Defining Issue Test (DIT) for their moral reasoning. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was conducted to compare the differences among the subgroups. As a result, there was significant difference in P (%) score both by teaching career and by school level. In the results of developmental transition, pre-teachers were the highest group. Roundtable-331 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: College Students’ Perception of Parental Use of Moral Socialization Techniques Author(s): Jupian J. Leung, College of Education and Human Services, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh Abstract: College students (N=343) anonymously reported their perception of parental use of moral socialization techniques while they were in high school and living at home. Results showed that parents used induction significantly more than power assertion or withdrawal of love, and they used power assertion more than withdrawal of love. Mothers used induction significantly more than fathers but did not differ from fathers in the use of power assertion or withdrawal of love. Results also showed that induction was positively related to students’ moral emotions and power assertion negatively related to students’ moral actions. Roundtable-332 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Title: Stage 7 and Multiple Moral Issues Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Room: 802 Page 31 of 134 Gunnar Jorgensen, Communication Director, (Unaffiliated), Norway Abstract: In his concept of Stage 7, Kohlberg argues that cognitive moral reasoning has a counterpart in the affective domain, a moral impulse that precedes and follows cognitive development. Personality traits in the affective domain have traditionally been described as four temperamental clusters of traits since the old Greek philosophers, via Galen and Kant, as well as Eysenck and Cruise & Blitchington. The object of this study is to explore possible relationships between temperament and cognitive moral reasoning along four moral principles. Results from a pilot study using a test developed to measure this relationship, will be presented. Those who wish may take the Multiple Moral Issues Test (MMIT). Roundtable-333 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Room: 802 Title: Promoting Student Civic Involvement and Social Action Author(s): Joseph Corsetti, Department of Humanities, New Haven Academy Meredith Gavrin, New Haven Academy Abstract: Each senior at New Haven Academy Interdistrict Magnet School, as an outgrowth of the Facing History and Ourselves (FHAO) four year program, designs, implements, and presents a Social Action Project. In the context of the senior Humanities electives each student identifies a local, national, international issue he/she will explore further. Each student then develops an independent proposal outlining a course of action to address the issue and implements the plan in the spring semester. This roundtable will also explore ways for other educators to implement similar social action projects and civic engagement activities in other educational settings. Welcome Reception Sponsored by St. John’s University Entertainment by NYU Steinhardt String Quartet Shorin Room, Kimmel Center , 8th Floor 5:45 pm-7:00 pm Dinner On Your Own 7:00 pm AME Executive Board Pre-Conference “Working” Dinner Payne Room, Pless Hall 4th Floor 6:30 pm-10:00 pm 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 32 of 134 Friday, November 16 Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for University Life 60 Washington Square South Registration Desk Open from 8:00 am-5:00 pm Morning Coffee from 8:30 am-10:00 am Kohlberg Lecture 8:30 am-10:30 am Location: Jack H. Skirball Center for the Performing Arts 60 Washington Square South, New York University Welcome begins at 9:00 am Mary Brabeck, Dean of New York University’s Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development John Sexton, President of New York University John Snarey, President of the Association for Moral Education Kwame Anthony Appiah Laurence S. Rockefeller University Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University “Global Citizenship” Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 10:45 am-12:00 pm Session 15 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 803 Papers #5 Title: Global Citizenship and State Standards in Social Studies and Civics Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 33 of 134 Anatoli Rapoport, Purdue University Abstract: In the era of globalization and economic and political interdependence the term “global citizenship” acquires new meanings. The concept of global citizenship challenges educators, particularly in the areas of social studies, to utilize new approaches in citizenship education. How helpful are State Standards in this process? Using context analysis the author explores how and to what extent State Standards in Social Studies and Civics direct educators in teaching about global citizenship. Title: Civic Identity Crystallization in a Religious Particularistic Venue Author(s): Gross Zehavit, School of Education, Bar-Ilan University, Israel Abstract: The aim of this paper is to investigate how the crystallization of civic identity can be enhanced in a particularistic socialization setting. This study was carried out among graduates of state religious education in Israel utilizing qualitative and quantitative methodologies. The main conclusion is that the separation between the nationalistic and civic components within the ego identity structure of the individual weakens democratic consciousness whereas the integration and adaptation of them within the socialization process strengthen and enhance democratic awareness and engagement. Session 16 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 914 Symposium #77 Title: Concepts, Research, and Practices of Linking Different Perspectives Chair(s): Wiel Veugelers, Graduate School of Teaching and Learning, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Discussant: Victor Battistich, University of Missouri, St. Louis Abstract: The concept of citizenship is getting more complex: it includes in contemporary political and scientific discourse the formal political level of society, civil society, and interpersonal relationships between individuals and groups. Citizenship is not restricted to the national level but is embedded in globalism and cosmopolitanism. Deepening the concept of citizenship makes the link between citizenship development and identity development more manifest and stronger. At the same time morality is now viewed as context-based. Moral values and moral reasoning are embedded in social context. Moral values are not absolute but become meaningful in social, cultural and political practices. Linking citizenship development and moral development can create citizenship education with meaningful learning experiences for students aimed at what Dewey called ‘a democratic way of life’: on getting involved in a democratic society, on the political level, in civil society and on the interpersonal level. In this symposium we will present recent work on linking moral development and citizenship education, in particular we 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 34 of 134 will focus on conceptual frameworks in linking different theoretical perspectives, like spirituality, character education, political science and critical pedagogy.. Title: Morality, Spirituality and Global Citizenship Author: Kirsi Tirri, University of Helsinki, Finland Abstract: Osler and Starkey (2005) identify cosmopolitan citizenship informed by human rights as a goal of citizenship education. This kind of citizenship is a world view that celebrates human diversity. Cosmopolitan citizens act locally, nationally and globally. They accept shared responsibility for humanity’s common future. In this paper the concepts of morality and spirituality are linked to the concept of global citizenship. The paper will argue that good citizenship education will address questions concerning moral and spiritual domains. The holistic approach to education acknowledges the development of a whole student also in citizenship education. Empirical findings are reported to support the linkages between moral and spiritual domains in education. Title: Moral Character Education: An Integrative Approach Author: Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: The Integrative Ethical Education model (IEE; Narváez 2006) provides an intentional, wholistic, comprehensive, empirically-derived approach to values education. It is rooted in what was intuited by ancient philosophers and confirmed by current science to be necessary to cultivate moral character, citizenship and human flourishing. The five steps of the model are: (1) Establish a caring relationship with each student; (2) Establish a caring supportive classroom climate; (3) Teach ethical skills across the curriculum and extra-curriculum; (4) Use a novice-to-expert pedagogy; (5) Foster student self-regulation and self-actualization. These steps are embedded in a context of community involvement and high expectations for behavior and achievement. Title: Moral Development and Citizenship Education from a Political Education Perspective Author: Fritz Oser, Lehrstuhl fuer Paedagogik und Paedagogische Psychologie, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Horst Biedermann, Lehrstuhl fuer Paedagogik und Paedagogische Psychologie, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Abstract: The relationship between the quality of the moral judgment and citizenship competencies are not yet clearly resolved. In this paper we hypothesize that morality and the content of citizenship are completely different domains and that the stimulation of a higher form of moral judgment does not change any competence profile of political thinking (e.g. knowledge, attitude, concept, action disposition, sensitivity). In addition to a discussion on a conceptual basis – i.e. in which we try to show that the justice issue is neither directly related to political competencies nor to the concept of law and public norms –, 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 35 of 134 we present empirical findings in terms of relationships between aspects of political identity from the IEA CIVED-Study for the upper secondary students and DIT measures (sample: age = 17-18; n = 1270). We hypothesize that there are no correlations between aspects of both social-affective and discourse-procedural oriented political behavior styles and DIT measures with respect to age and gender. These expected results do not militate against the necessity of moral education in schools and the goal of developing civic competencies and democratic understanding. Rather they point the fact out, that if we only stimulate one of these two domains, the other one is not positively or negatively influenced; thus it must be separately stimulated with different content and different behavior goals. Does this mean that political thinking cannot be combined with moral issues? To that question we suggest the answer, that in fact political situations like scandals, corruptions or misuse of power can’t be morally investigated. Therefore we think that the core issue of political and civic education cannot be moral education. Question of the functioning of governmental and public power management are not prima facie moral issues. Thus, political and civic education has to be aware of how and when the two domains can be brought intentionally together and how and when they have to be separated. We would like to present different models of the relationship between morality and civic contents. These models are either interpretative or additive or complementary or regulative and the consequences of each model are powerfully different. To distinguish these models would be an important teaching standard. Title: Moral Development and Citizenship Education from a Critical Pedagogy Perspective Author: Wiel Veugelers, University of Amsterdam / University for Humanistics, The Netherlands Abstract: A critical pedagogy perspective on linking moral development and citizenship education means focussing on a participatory democracy, a democratic way of life, empowering of subjects aiming at humanity and a more justice world for all. Developing values is a process of positioning itself in discourses and practices. A critical pedagogical perspective means gaining insight in the power relations in and between discourses and empowering the oppressed voices and human beings. The paper will explore linkages of concepts from theories of moral development, citizenship education and critical pedagogy. Results from different empirical studies (with quantitative and qualitative methods) will be used to clarify concepts, to show practices and to present possibilities and constraints to link moral development and citizenship education. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 36 of 134 Session 17 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 802 Papers # 32 Title: Being White/Being Good: White Complicity, Moral Responsibility and Social Justice Pedagogy Author(s): Barbara Applebaum, Syracuse University Abstract: This paper looks at a distinction that Iris Marion Young makes between two models of responsibility – a liability model of responsibility and what Young refers to as a social connection model. I argue that the liability model is the one primarily assumed by white students in courses that teach about systemic social injustice and this model supports white denials of complicity making it more difficult for white students to understand their role in the perpetuation of systemic oppression and privilege. The social connection model is detailed and its implications for social justice education are examined. Title: Social Class, Income Disparity: Children's Awareness and Teachers' Responsibility Author(s): Elizabeth Saenger, Retired Teacher of Ethics, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, Bronx, New York Joan Arrowsmith, Children's Librarian, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, Bronx, New York Abstract: Even young children are aware of the huge differences between rich and poor, on local, national, and global scales. Significantly, children of every economic level are affected. We have developed specific ways to help them navigate this minefield, including framing discussion, using children's literature, understanding anthropological approaches and sociological insights, supporting friendships, improving money issues in schools, avoiding harmful projects, putting the meritocracy myth in perspective, and providing a clear, honest, and matter of fact language for everyone. Our goal is social justice. Title: The Moral Dimension of Tolerance to Human Diversity Author(s): Rivka Witenberg, School of Psychology, Australian Catholic University, Australia Abstract: The kinds of justifications children and younger and older adolescents use to support tolerant and intolerant judgments about human diversity were examined. For the tolerant responses, three main belief categories emerged based on the beliefs that others should be treated fairly (fairness), empathetically (empathy) and that reason/logic ought to govern judgments (reasonableness) linking tolerance to moral reasoning, rules and values. The major constraint to tolerance was beliefs in freedom of speech, pointing to a conflict in values between tolerance and other human rights. Age and gender differences also emerged. Grounding tolerance in theories of morality allows for an alternative approach to promote harmonious intergroup relationship. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 37 of 134 Session 18 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 901 Papers # 31 Title: Community Education and the Construction of Democracy and Citizenship Values Author(s): Ulisses F. Araújo, School of Arts, Sciences and Humanities, University of São Paulo, Brazil Abstract: This research paper presents the experience carried out over 2 years in which two Brazilian public elementary schools situated in a poor district of the City of São Paulo created an ethical environment, based in values of ethics, human rights, citizenship and democracy. In this experience, we have fostered change in school curriculum, inserting ethical and human rights contents through interdisciplinary and transversal strategies and not specific disciplines; strengthened school, family and community relationships through regular forums of ethics and citizenship in which students, teachers and community members planned ethical tours in the school’s surroundings, and later worked in classroom through project work. Title: Social Education as Part of a National Curriculum in Israel Author(s): Yael Barenholtz, Ministry of Education, Israel Abstract: Social education is part of the national core curriculum in Israel as of 2007. One mandatory session per week is assigned for social education. Participating in this session is not for credit, and students’ performance is not graded. The Social education curriculum for 7-12, includes: promoting youth leadership, values of and for democracy, social and civic involvement, volunteer work in school and in the community, discussing current events and its moral aspects, teaching ethics in a pluralistic society, etc. We will go on a short tour clarifying the concept of Social Education, its goals and “performance” in the high school system in Israel. Title: The Chinese Debate over Deyu and the New Curriculum Reform Author(s): Zhenzhou Zhao, School of Education, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China Co-author(s): Chuanbao Tan, School of Education, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China Abstract: Deyu (de denotes moral, political-ideological and other characters; yu denotes education) is one of the most popular topics of debate in contemporary Chinese society. This study analyses China’s internal debate to see how local researchers re-explore the definition and function of Deyu since the 1980s. Particular attention will be given to the recent decade in which China is getting more involved in a growing global and information age. The discussion will show how the educational researchers and practitioners struggle to make the Western moral theories take root in China and develop local perspectives in the ongoing New Curriculum Reform. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 38 of 134 Session 19 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 912 Symposium # 56 Title: Social Change, Values, and the Management of “Positioning” Chair: Helen Haste, Harvard Graduate School of Education; University of Bath, England Co-author(s): Angela Bermudez, Harvard Graduate School of Education Leticia Braga, Harvard Graduate School of Education Salie Abrahams, International Peace University, South Africa Abstract: In understanding social change, how we use values and beliefs is at least, if not more, important than knowing what values people claim to hold. ‘Positioning’, unlike analysis based on fixed ‘roles’, takes into account the constantly fluid and negotiated relationship between persons, between persons and institutions – and the continual renegotiation of those relationships through resistance and power. This panel will explore different examples of positioning, in relation to changing social, political and ethical values. Angela Bermudez will present analyses of an online-discussion amongst high school students about the Rodney King incident and the “L.A. Riots” of 1992. Students’ arguments regarding the role of historic legacies, memory, and social and personal responsibility are shaped largely by how participants in the forum position themselves, how they position their co-discussants, and how they presume other students position themselves. Leticia Braga describes how Brazilian immigrant adolescents construct a narrative around their past, present, and future experiences of immigration between Brazil and the United States. Salie Abrahams and Helen Haste analyze how young Black and Coloured South Africans redefined their identities and repositioned themselves and the social groups of their society, when Mandela came to power in 1994. Some of these young people have been followed up 12 years later and we compare their positioning then and now. Title: Positioning in the Process of Deliberating Controversial Ethical and Political Issues Author(s): Angela Bermudez, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: This paper presents analyses of an online discussion amongst high school students about the Rodney King incident and the “L.A. Riots” of 1992. The author will discuss how the varied ways in which students position themselves and others in terms of ethnicity, social background, and place of origin prescribes their understanding of the incident and proscribes alternative interpretations. In particular, Angela will illustrate how students’ arguments regarding the role of historic legacies, memory, and social and personal responsibility are shaped largely by how participants in the forum position themselves, how they position their co-discussants, and how they presume other students position themselves. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 39 of 134 Title: Being or Becoming an Immigrant? Understanding Adolescents’ Contextualized Identities Author(s): Leticia Braga, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: This paper focuses on how the identity development of a sample of Brazilian immigrant adolescents must be understood as being contextually grounded. The perspectives voiced by participants illustrate how a narrative is constructed around their past, present, and future experiences of immigration between Brazil and the United States. In using positioning as an analytical tool, participants’ statements provide examples of how national categories like “Brazilian” are transformed into ethnic ones, and documentation status can be interpreted in multiple ways. The analyses indicate that youths who look similar demographically can still have vastly different experiences of becoming and being an immigrant. Title: “You Can’t Oppress Yourself”: Identity and Re-positioning in Post-Apartheid South Africa Author(s): Salie Abrahams, International Peace University, South Africa Helen Haste, Harvard Graduate School of Education; University of Bath, England Abstract: This paper reports a study with Black and Coloured South Africans at the time that Nelson Mandela came to power—and they and their families became enfranchised for the first time. The data (from in-depth interviews conducted by the first author in the first rond, and by both authors in the second round) demonstrate how they redefined their identities and positioned and repositioned themselves and the social groups of their society. Particularly striking about these data were the invocation, in discussion of their personal identity, of Mandela’s discourses about truth and reconciliation, about creating a new South Africa that was about being “South African,” not White, Black, or Coloured, and about the need to remove apartheid from the mind, not only the law, for all groups. These young people identified very strongly with the “new” South Africa and the concept of opportunity that was free from constraints. The data are a vivid snapshot of a period of intense transition, and the lives of a group most powerfully affected by it. The sample is being followed up, 12 years later, and data from the second round will be presented to demonstrate similarities and differences between positioning then and now. Session 20 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Symposium #72 Title: Translating Developmental Theory and Research into Educational Practice: Findings from University-School Board Partnerships Developed to Promote Students’ Social Responsibility Chair(s): Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl, University of British Columbia, Canada Lisa Pedrini, Vancouver School District, Canada Co-author(s)(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 40 of 134 Maureen Dockendorf, School District #43 Coquitlam, Canada Shelly Hymel, University of British Columbia, Canada Jeannie Kerr, Admiral Seymour Elementary School, Vancouver, Canada Molly Stewart Lawlor, University of British Columbia, Canada Sharon LeClair, School District #43 Coquitlam, Canada Jan Sippel, Vancouver School District, Canada Terry Waterhouse, School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University College of the Fraser Valley, Canada Abstract: The promotion of social responsibility and social-emotional competence in students has long been considered to be a goal of education. In 1997, in British Columbia (BC), Canada, the Ministry of Education identified social responsibility as one of four performance standards - a standard to be promoted to the same degree of reading, writing, and numeracy. In response to the increased focus on social responsibility in BC, a partnership was formed between faculty at the University of British Columbia's Faculty of Education and the University College of the Fraser Valley with educators at the Vancouver School Board and the Coquitlam School District. In this symposium three projects that have emerged from this partnership will be presented. These projects can serve as an illustration of the ways in which schools and universities can work collaboratively to translate theory and research into practice to promote students’ social responsibility. Title: Assessing Social Experience and Socially Responsible Behavior in Secondary Students Author(s): Lisa Pedrini, Vancouver School District, Canada Jan Sippel, Vancouver School District, Canada Shelly Hymel, University of British Columbia, Canada Terry Waterhouse, School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University College of the Fraser Valley, Canada Abstract: The Safe School Social Responsibility Survey for Secondary Schools is an extensive selfreport measure of student perceptions of personal safety, self- esteem, social responsibility, racial and sexual discrimination, bullying, school violence and substance use, school connectedness, and community involvement as well as school and home support. As part of a unique university-community collaboration between practitioners and researchers, the survey was developed in response to educational mandates to foster socially responsible behavior among students and demands for school accountability. Based on extensive consultation with partner school districts and a review of the diversity of approaches used in schools to enhance school safety and student social responsibility, this survey provides an inside look at the social and moral climate of secondary schools across districts within British Columbia. Title: Creating Socially Responsible Learning Communities in Elementary Schools: Translating Theory into Practice Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 41 of 134 Maureen Dockendorf, School District #43 Coquitlam, Canada Sharon LeClair, School District #43 Coquitlam, Canada Abstract: British Columbia, Canada is the first jurisdiction to have developed performance standards for Social Responsibility. Learn about one elementary school’s journey to create a safe and caring learning community using the Social Responsibility Performance Standards as a framework. Research supports both the importance and value of social and emotional learning and its links to academic achievement. This session will include practical strategies that focus on the implementation of high-quality and sustainable social and emotional earning that is integrated into every aspect of both whole school and classroom learning. The presentation will demonstrate how systemic, ordinary initiatives create possibilities to develop extraordinary school climates that are safe, caring and promote high academic learning for all students. Title: Linking Theory and Research to Practice: The Role of Classroom and School “Connectedness” to Social Responsibility, Empathy-Related Responding, and Academic Motivation Author(s): Molly Stewart Lawlor, University of British Columbia, Canada Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl, University of British Columbia, Canada Jeannie Kerr, Admiral Seymour Elementary School, Vancouver, Canada Abstract: Recent years have seen an emergence of research linking students’ school belonging and school “connectedness” to children’s social-emotional competence, social responsibility, and school adjustment. Although both theory and research point to the salient role of the school context or "community" on children's academic achievement and success in school, relatively little attention has been paid to examining the ways in which schools as social institutions influence the socio-emotional needs of students, over time. Cognizant of this important relationship between school context and student success, educators at four elementary schools in Vancouver, in collaboration with partners at the University of British Columbia and the Vancouver School Board, have undertaken a series of studies that demonstrate the ways in which efforts to promote students’ feelings of school and classroom belonging can result in changes in socially responsible behaviors and socialemotional understanding. Session 21 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 907 Film Screening #70 Title: Film Screening of American Idealist: The Story of Sargent Shriver Author(s): Bruce Orenstein, Writer/Director/Producer, Chicago Video Project Anna Gomberg, Outreach Coordinator, Chicago Video Project Abstract: During the 1960’s Sargent Shriver’s foundational work with the Peace Corps and the War on Poverty inspired a generation to explore new approaches to service and civic responsibility. In his private life, Shriver was a man of great character and a passionate 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 42 of 134 idealist. This session will consist of presentation of an upcoming historical PBS documentary, American Idealist: The Story of Sargent Shriver, and a discussion of the film’s utility for moral education. Special attention will be paid to the use of film as a teaching tool, historical figures as moral exemplars, and service-learning and moral development. Session 22 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 903 Special Topic # 81 Title: Publishing in Academic Journals: Tips to Help You Publish Successfully Author(s): Graham Hobbs, Editorial Director, Education Journals, United Kingdom Abstract: In the academic world, publishing papers in academic journals is becoming increasingly important for all academics, especially those starting their careers. The process of submitting a paper to journal, understanding the peer review process and getting your paper accepted is a mysterious world. In this presentation you will find out how to choose the best journal for your paper, how to prepare the perfect manuscript and find out the top ten reasons why your paper could be rejected. Session 23 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 904 Papers #13 Title: Exploring Thematic Analyses of Interviews with Cambodian-American Buddhists and Christians Author(s): Kaye Cook, Gordon College Meghan Savina, Gordon College Abstract: In this presentation, we will present findings from the thematic analysis of interviews about values that were carried out with Cambodian-American Christians and Buddhists. We will use these interviews as a way of discussing techniques for conducting thematic analysis and combining findings from several analyses with one another. Title: Meetings with Remarkable Men and Women: On Teaching Moral Exemplars Author(s): Roger Bergman, Creighton University Abstract: For many years, I have taught an undergraduate seminar on diverse moral exemplars and various theoretical perspectives on their development. Although there is a growing literature on moral exemplars, there is little on the teaching of moral exemplars as a method of moral education. Although Aristotle provides relevant comments on emulation and on youthful character, I will be working mainly from intuition and reflection on my own experience in the classroom. Helpful ideas will be gleaned from MacIntyre, Freire, Flescher, and Noddings. Key topics include moral imagination, personal vocation, the human telos, and historical legacy as moral horizon. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 43 of 134 Session 24 10:45 am–12:00 pm Room: 905 Papers #12 Title: Preparing Dutch Undergraduates for Lives of Moral and Civic Responsibility Author(s): Rob Boschhuizen, Center for Educational Training, Assessment and Research, Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands Co-author(s): Joyce Aalberts, Faculty of Psychology and Education, Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands Abstract: Higher education students will be the leaders and teachers in tomorrow’s multicultural society. It is therefore imperative to educate them in how to be responsible and critical professionals. Such professionals need to be adept in judging and defending arguments. Sooner or later, judgment will be integrated into the curricula of all institutes of higher education throughout Europe. Judgment is a complex competence, requiring a longitudinal and interdisciplinary approach from primary school to university. This paper will contribute to the interchange of theories and practices (including good practices) in this domain. Title: It’s All Good: A Fresh Look at Ethical Relativism Author(s): Theo L. Dawson, The Developmental Testing Service, LLC Zachary Stein, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: In both Perry's (Perry, 1970) and Kitchener and King's (Kitchener & King, 1990) models of epistemological development, the earliest stages of development are differentiated from later stages by an increasing awareness of the uncertainty of knowledge. At the earliest stages, knowledge is viewed as absolute. In adolescence, an increasing awareness of the uncertainty of knowledge produces relativism. Both Perry's and Kitchener & King's research primarily focused on adolescence and adulthood. In this paper, we examine patterns in the emergence of relativism in 5 to 57-year-olds. We identify 6 forms of relativism, each of which appears for the first time at a particular developmental level. The results indicate that relativism, rather than being symptomatic of an adolescent developmental crisis, is a gradually developing phenomenon. We explore the implications. Title: Moral Emotions: Their Role in Moral Development and Education Author(s): Brigitte Latzko, University of Leipzig, Germany Abstract: This study contributes to a theoretical framework that integrates cognitive and affective aspects in moral development. Moral reasoning of students attending elementary school was compared with reasoning of emotionally or behaviourally disturbed students. In the tradition of domain theory children were asked to judge rule transgressions as well as to 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 44 of 134 attribute emotions to the transgressor and victim. Emotionally or behaviourally disturbed children attributed more often positive emotions to the transgressor and were less empathic. The results indicate that moral emotions are strongly associated with the acceptance of rule transgression and support the effect of domain appropriate education, especially the education of moral emotions. Session 25 10:45 am–12:00 pm Room: 906 Papers # 6 Title: Conflicting Moralities in Children’s Literature: Children’s Choices and Adults’ Agendas Author(s): John D. Beach, The School of Education, St. John’s University Abstract: A content analysis of “best” book lists chosen by children and adults (librarians, teachers, reviewers) over thirty years reveals significant divergences. Adults see children’s literature as a vehicle for imposing morality, while children’s own choices reveal moral issues as emerging from all stories as part of the fabric of characters and situations. The developmental nature of children’s thinking is ignored by many adult recommendations that favor the magnitude of the issue over children’s readiness to comprehend it. The success of moral education likely depends on a better match to developmental stages and a less controlling approach to adopting values. Title: Literature and the Cultivation of Ethical Relationship across Difference Author(s): Ann Chinnery, Faculty of Education, Simon Fraser University, Canada Abstract: Literature has recently come to play an increasingly prominent role in moral education, especially insofar as it facilitates development of the other regarding moral emotions such as empathy and compassion. In this paper, I explore two divergent approaches to the use of literature in moral education in pluralist societies: 1) using literature to cultivate the moral imagination by bridging the self-other gap across differences of race, class, gender, etc.; and 2) using “resistant literature” (literature that deliberately excludes the reader) in order to cultivate humility and respect for those whose lives may be very different from one’s own. Title: Shakespearean Drama as a Tool of Reconciliation in War-torn Bosnia Author(s): Andrew Garrod, Dartmouth College Anthony Luckett, The MATCH School, Boston Abstract: Although it is twelve years since the U.S.-brokered Dayton Agreement ended civil war in the Balkans, hostilities run deep and ethnic tensions persist. Schools throughout the country are segregated, and ideas that encourage cross-cultural collaboration are viewed with suspicion. Mounting bilingual and bi-ethnic drama productions with teenagers from the city of Mostar in Bosnia and Herzegovina was a deliberate effort in peace making and 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 45 of 134 enhancing dialogue across ethnic and religious divides. This presentation explores the impact of Bosnian student involvement in the productions of Romeo and Juliet (August 2006, Mostar) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (August 2007, toured the Balkans). Session 27 10:45 am–12:00 pm Room: 909 Symposium #48 Title: Adults as Moral and Character Educators: How They Understand Their Roles and Responsibilities Faciliatator: Ann Higgins-D’Alessandro, Fordham University Title: Youth Sport Coaches as Moral Educators: Possibilities and Challenges Author(s): Nicole M. LaVoi, Tucker Center for Research on Girls & Women in Sport, University of Minnesota F. Clark Power, Center for Ethical Education, University of Notre Dame Brooke Crawford, Center for Ethical Education, University of Notre Dame Kristin Sheehan, Center for Ethical Education, University of Notre Dame Ann Power, Center for Ethical Education, University of Notre Dame Abstract: The challenge of preparing character educators is compounded as we consider character education outside of the classroom. One of the greatest “growth areas” in character education is in youth sports. To what extent are youth sport coaches open to accepting responsibility as a character educators? In two papers, we present exploratory findings based on a train-the-trainer model of preparing youth sport coaches as character educators. The focus is on the coaches and their response to a three-hour “Play Like a Champion” coach education workshop, which presents coaches with an approach that draws on moral education as well as achievement goal and self-determination theories. The workshop begins by addressing the role of the coach as character educator and gives coaches’ practical methods of acting as character educators in practices and games. Pre and post workshop evaluations provide important insights into the way in which coaches embrace their responsibilities as character educators, and perceive elements of the sports climate that potentially foster or hinder athlete moral development. In particular we are learning how coaches perceive and respond to the tensions inherent in coaching—namely the complex tensions between optimal performance (i.e. winning), optimal development (including athletic, social, psychological, and moral development), and optimal experience (i.e. fun and enjoyment). Title: Peruvian Teachers’ Construction of Community and Moral Self Author(s): Susana Frisancho, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru Ann Higgins-D’Alessandro, Fordham University Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 46 of 134 For Peruvian education, the construction of a sense of community within schools was strongly recommended in 2003 by the Commission for Truth and Reconciliation as one way to help in the construction of an inclusive, democratic and just society. However, very little has been done to follow this recommendation. In this context, it is relevant to understand which notion of community teachers already have, and how it informs teacher's daily practices and their commitment with moral and democratic development. Results of a study of 59 Peruvian high school teachers from three different kinds of schools explored the construction of a sense of community and the development of a moral self and analyzed their implications for moral and democratic education. Results indicate that teachers regard community as a kind of place in which to become better people because socializing and living with others is perceived as essential to human nature and that teachers did not have a developed sense of moral self, which may hamper their development as moral educators. Title: Classroom-Level Emotional and Instructional Quality and Children’s Risk for School Failure: The Role of School-wide Intervention in Social-Emotional Learning and Literacy Author(s): Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: Higher quality classroom emotional and instructional climate in elementary school settings is associated with greater student engagement in academic activities and less negative behavior with peers and teachers. Little is known, however, about the impact of interventions in social-emotional learning and literacy on the links between classroom characteristics and children’s developmental outcomes, particularly for children at risk for school failure. Using data collected from 942 3rd grade students, their teacher, parents and classrooms during the first two waves of a 3-year school-randomized study of the Reading, Writing, Respect and Resolution (4Rs) Program, this paper addresses (1) whether the quality of classroom climate moderates the relationship between child school risk status and academic and relational outcomes, and (2) whether exposure to the 4Rs Program strengthens the role of classroom climate in promoting greater academic and relational outcomes for at-risk children. Child school risk includes both functional (behavior problems, poor school engagement) and demographic (maternal education) risk indicators. Quality of classroom emotional and instructional climate was assessed through independent observational ratings of 82 classrooms in Spring 2005. Child academic and relational functioning was assessed through teacher-reported language and literacy skills and relationship quality. Implications for school-based social-emotional learning interventions will be discussed. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 47 of 134 Session 28 10:45 am–12:00 pm Room: 910 Papers #49 Title: Creating Technological “Safe Space” for Dialogue: Diverse Teacher Candidate Interactions First Author Benjamin H. Dotger, School of Education, Department of Teaching and Leadership, Syracuse University Second Author: Michael J. Maher, Saint Augustine’s College Abstract: In order to expose teacher candidates to diverse populations and perspectives, video conferencing technologies were employed to connect two demographically-different teacher candidate groups. Interactions centered on virtual discussions of race, gender, class, and sexuality. Results indicate the emergence of a “safe space” for teacher candidates to engage in challenging dialogue. Implications focus on the increased use of emergent technologies as a forum for teacher candidate racial identity development. Title: Helping Teachers to Develop a Moral Language About Teaching First Author: Willem Wardekker, VU University Amsterdam; Windesheim University of Professional Studies, The Netherlands Second Author: Yvonne Leeman, University of Amsterdam; Windesheim University of Professional Studies, The Netherlands Abstract: We will present a method developed to help teachers acquire a language to talk and think about the ethical implications of their work. Additionally, we will present an analysis of the statements teachers see as most relevant in this respect, and indicate for what elements of the profession it is true that teachers are unable or unwilling to think of the moral implications. Title: What Do Teachers Do to Raise Good Citizens? Author(s): Michael McCambridge, School of Education, California Lutheran University Julia Sieger, School of Education, California Lutheran University Abstract: If the purpose of schools includes a responsibility for critical enculturation into a political democracy, then teachers are indispensable. (Goodlad, 1992) The question arises, what is it exactly that teachers do to raise good citizens? Survey research and focus interviews were used to identify specific actions, which teachers believe fulfill this role. Believing that good teachers develop over time, a taxonomy introduced by Leland and Cohen (1991) was used to classify these actions into four teacher development stages. The purpose of this research is to help teachers recognize components of their own practice that do, indeed, help raise good citizens. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 48 of 134 Boxed Lunch Eisner & Lubin Auditorium, Kimmel Center: 4th Floor 12:00 pm - 12:45 pm Plenary Address 12:45 pm - 1:45 pm Kimmel Center, Eisner & Lubin Auditorium, 4 th Floor Anne Colby Psychologist and Senior Scholar at the Carnegie Foundation of the Advancement of Teaching “Educating for Democracy: Preparing Undergraduates for Responsible Political Engagement” Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 2:00 pm - 3:15 pm Session 29 2:00 pm –3:15 pm Room: 802 Symposium #76 Title: “Enter More Deeply”: Facing Fear in Anti-Racist Education Author(s): Barbara S. Stengel, Millersville University Co-authors: Mary Casey, Harvard Graduate School of Education Tracey Weis, Millersville University Abstract: The symposium involves three scholars – identified with history, psychology and philosophy respectively – who bring a specific disciplinary voice to the phenomenon of fear as it figures in racism and anti-racist education. Specifically, we examine the features of fear in the context of racism as well as what it means to enter more deeply into what William James calls "the aesthetical and ethical point of view" of those who are oppressed in a racist system. Title: Seeing Race/Reading Fear: Memory and History Author(s): Tracey Weis, Millersville University Abstract: “Visual forms,” one scholar has argued, “elicit desires, fantasies, and fears of both the artist and his/her audience.” Offering “insight into the habits of mind, the competing logics, and the critical debates of a particular eras,” visual evidence has become increasingly important to historians who seek to examine the assumptions of those who inhabited the past. Using images to identify and discuss the powerful emotions 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 49 of 134 (especially fear) that students bring into the classroom is particularly useful when the topics of study include race, gender, sexuality, and power. Images in the representation and interpretation of the Black Freedom Struggle will serve as a case study to ground the philosophical and psychological discussions of facing fear in anti-racist education – and as a potential tool for educating students' imagination. Title: Fear and Racism: The Tyranny of Judgment and the Failure of Imagination Author(s): Barbara S. Stengel, Millersville University Abstract: Fear figures in human experience at the level of personal perception, judgment, and emotional response and it functions systemically in patterns of expectation and interaction. A phenomenological analysis of personal and systemic experiences of racism (experiences of both the oppressed and the privileged) reveals in detail the tyranny of judgment and the failure of imagination that prevent persons from recognizing and responding generously to the aesthetic and ethical perspective of the racialized other. One specific effort to defuse judgment and enhance imagination in late adolescents—by studying the facets of fear and the rhetoric of racism in distinct but integrated college courses—will be explored. Title: Fear, Race, and Relationship in Adolescent Development Author(s): Mary Casey, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Adolescent development – social, moral and academic – is integrally linked to the quality of available relationships with peers, with authorities (including teachers) and with those less mature. Race and racism function in the lives of adolescents to limit possible – and possibly rewarding and challenging – relationships. Similarly, fear operates to restrict opportunities for interaction. As sites of potential interracial interaction, schools can open up opportunities for relationships while also educating the emotions and enhancing imagination. Using two school sites as case studies, this paper explores the intersection of fear, relationship and development in the context of race and racism. Session 30 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 803 Papers #30 Title: Teaching for Peace to Children of War in Sri Lanka Author(s): Chandi Fernando, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada Abstract This mixed-methods study examined (mal)adaptive development—especially moral and faith development—in children of war in Sri Lanka (war orphans, non-war orphans and a comparison group of children from intact families). The study involved 62 children and 15 caregivers. Measures included Goodenough Harris Drawings (man and woman), Risk and Resilience Indices, Sandtray Analysis, Stages of Faith Interview and a Sentence 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 50 of 134 Completion task. Contrary to past research, most war orphans demonstrated substantially better inner peace and resilience than expected. Although all participants spoke of faith at age appropriate levels, orphans and orphanage caregivers were more action oriented, while comparison participants were more philosophical. Title: A Theoretical Framework for Peace Education among Israelis and Palestinians Author(s): Shai Fuxman, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Amidst the bloodshed and suffering that plague Israelis and Palestinians, various education programs have been developed to promote peace. In order to fully maximize the potential that these educational efforts can have in bridging gaps between the two sides, it is necessary to identify the psycho-social characteristics that make this conflict intractable. This paper aims to do so through a review of three areas of literature: literature on intractable conflicts, collective narratives, and development of political understandings. This analysis provides a framework with which to understand the role that education can play in making way for reconciliation in the region. Title: Being a Peacemaker: Muslim and Christian Peacemakers’ Faith-Based Values Author(s): Joshua P. Morgan, Azusa Pacific University Co-author(s): Kevin Reimer, Azusa Pacific University Joy Bustrum, Azusa Pacific University Theresa Tisdale, Azusa Pacific University Abstract: Interfaith conflict has ravaged the world for millennia. Many programs suggest peacemaking interventions. However, none investigate what exemplar peacemakers are doing. This secondary study investigates how the faith-based values of exemplar Muslim and Christian interfaith peacemakers contribute to the formation of their peacemaking methodologies. Each peacemaker was interviewed with questions taken from McAdams’ (1997) Life Narrative Interview. The transcripts were analyzed with qualitative coding, forming a Grounded Theory (Strauss, 1987) of how faith-based values contribute to the formation of peacemaking methodology. Five themes emerged: Principles, Personalization, Purpose, Process, and Pragmatism. Session 31 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Symposium #64 Title: Religion and Morality Discussant: René Arcilla, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 51 of 134 Title: Morality and Religious Pluralism Author: Lawrence Blum, University of Massachusetts, Boston Abstract: People in the US and elsewhere are increasingly confronted by an often bewildering plurality of religious traditions and their accompanying moralities, including, of course, purely secular morality. For this situation we require a morality of religious pluralism that seeks to secure respect for others while providing a justification for our continued loyalty to our own tradition. I examine some attempts to provide such a morality (in the Vatican II declaration, Nostra Aetate, Diana Eck’s Encountering God, and David Wong’s Natural Moralities), and argue for a rejection of both a purely secular and a purely religious morality. Title: Catholicism and Pluralism Within and Outside of Religious Groups Author: F. Clark Power, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Oser’s theory of the development of religious judgment and Fowler’s theory of faith development help us to map some of the complex ways in which moral and religious judgments influence and inform one another. Using a sample of young Catholics who are teaching in Catholic Schools, I examine some of the ways in which religious belief animates what Blum calls “the morality of religious pluralism.” I also explore ways in which religious traditions themselves are deeply pluralistic and thus require a “morality of religious pluralism” for the resolution of internal conflicts. Title: Kohlberg’s Moral and Religious Exemplars: Through the Eyes of William James Author: John Snarey, Emory University Co-author(s): Lynn Bridgers, Educator/Consultant, Santa Fe, New Mexico Abstract: The least understood of Kohlberg’s methods of moral education is his use of “moral exemplars.” Such exemplars, Kohlberg observed, typically are religiously motivated to move from principled moral reasoning to moral action. This paper will review his top 12 exemplars through the eyes of William James. Why did Kohlberg select them and not others? What we can learn from them in terms of making effective use of exemplars in moral education today. Session 32 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 914 Symposium #74 Title: A Cosmopolitan Orientation Toward the World: Hope, Thought, and Dialogue Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 52 of 134 Stephanie Burdick-Shepherd, Teachers College, Columbia University Cristina Cammarano, Teachers College, Columbia University Gonzalo Obelleiro, Teachers College, Columbia University Chair: David T. Hansen, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: What is distinctive about a “cosmopolitan” orientation to the world? In this symposium, three presenters respond to the question by elucidating what they regard as core aspects of a cosmopolitan outlook. The aspects include (1) hope as a mode of moving in the world that is animated by practical knowledge of hope’s generative power, (2) thought as influenced by dynamic forgetfulness and remembrance as people expand their vision of possibilities, and (3) dialogue as guided by an interest in bringing into being humane modes of intercommunication both near and far. The presenters will illustrate how a cosmopolitan orientation offers ethical and moral resources for a world often fractured by suspicion and misunderstanding. Title: Seeing With Hope: A Direction for Cosmopolitan Education Author(s): Stephanie Burdick-Shepherd, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: A cosmopolitan education provides a standpoint from which to view the world. This standpoint encompasses both the particularities of the human subject’s experience and the generalities of the world. The author will argue that through a cosmopolitan education, this outlook can emerge as an orientation of hope. She will suggest that such hope is not for the world and its people; instead, it is a hope in the world and its people. This hope enables the subject to engage meaningfully with and see possibilities in the world. This engaged seeing can be described as a careful reading of the world through which one resists ‘appropriating’ other subjects. The engagement turns persons toward one another, not in a search for already known commonalities or differences but rather in quest of what might be newer and more expansive for all. Title: The Necessity of Forgetfulness and Remembrance in Cosmopolitan Thinking Author(s): Cristina Cammarano, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: The author will highlight the place of memory as it cuts across thinking. Our capacity to conceptualize experience depends upon memory; “autobiographical memory” points to how one makes sense, or think through, events as the author relates them in a continuity across time; and “historical memory” encompasses social thinking as a group interprets and presents to itself past events. Drawing in part on the work of W. G. Sebald, the author will argue for another form of memory constitutive of cosmopolitan thinking. This form accompanies, and supports, developing cosmopolitan virtue through which a person gains a broader viewpoint of the world as he or she aspires to lead a good life. The author conceives this form of memory as a fusion of “moral forgetting” and “moral remembering.” The former is important in order to move beyond (when necessary) local, 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 53 of 134 naturalized standpoints; the latter is crucial for unsettling and reopening frames of reference on the world. Ultimately a cosmopolitan outlook assists persons “to keep the future open.” Title: A Dialogical Vision as a Core Element in the Cosmopolitan Author(s): Gonzalo Obelleiro, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: There are many ways to approach the question of global citizenship as a possible response to the challenges of our time including the education of world languages and cultures, a revision of history curricula, the widespread promotion of democratic spirit and practices, the establishment of international governing bodies, etc. However, this presentation focuses on the cultivation of a cosmopolitan orientation as a central moral aspect of global citizenship. The author claims is that the ever-changing nature of the world and the increasingly deepening awareness of interdependence that defines our human condition demand not merely a rethinking of history, legal systems or political allegiances but also a rethinking of the self. Taking John Dewey’s notion of “the self as interest in the new”as a starting point, I describe a dialogical vision of the self, in which dialogue is understood in a broad sense as encompassing all interactions with others and the environment in radical openness to self-transformation in the pursuit of meaning and value. I foreground questions such as What would a vision of the self as emergent through a process of constant dialogical interaction with the environment look like? Why can this vision of the self constitute a core element in a cosmopolitan orientation? What difference can this orientation make in constructing a notion of global citizenship that responds to the moral challenges of the 21st century? Session 33 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 901 Papers #44 Title: Tensions in Education for Citizenship in the West and in Asia Author(s): Lutz H. Eckensberger, German Institute for International Educational Research, Germany Abstract: In the West, citizenship is based upon certain western moral values/principles like justice and equality. Education for citizenship therefore is based upon education for morality. Two types of democracy can be distinguished: participatory and representative democracy. Unlike education for reading writing and science, education for citizenship is by necessity contextualized. This calls for a theory of contextualized moral judgment. An action theoretical model of moral development will be used to demonstrate (a) that the two types of democracy differ psychologically, and (b) that the western representative democracy may be impeded by an Asian (Confucian) value system. Title: Panoply of Values: Tracing the Perceptions and Origins in Rajasthani Families Author(s): Divya Sharma, The Maharaja Sayajirao University Of Baroda, India 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 54 of 134 Prerana Mohite, The Maharaja Sayajirao University Of Baroda, India Abstract: The study attempts to examine the parents’ perceptions of values they live by and the sources of these values. The sample comprised of 80 parents of school going children of 9-12 years of age from urban middle class Hindu families of Udaipur city. The primary tool used for data collection was Family Tree Checklist. The Family Tree Checklist comprised of 48 values within Five basic core Universal Human Values viz. Truth, Righteous Conduct, Peace, Love and Non -Violence. The data collected was coded and analyzed both qualitatively and quantitatively from the perspectives of gender and family type. The results revealed that Parents’ lives depict an integration of all the five basic core universal human values, however Righteous conduct and Love were found to be the predominant values for them as compared to Truth, Peace and Non-violence. Further, Parents, Grandparents and Teachers emerged to be the most significant sources of values, whereas, the sources like Friends and Media emerged as virtual non-entity for them. Finally, although more research is needed, to identify the values people live by, the present study does resuscitate the importance of parents as significant sources. Title: The Making of Legal Culture in Three Chinese Societies Author(s): Thomas Kwan-Choi Tse, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Simon Tat-Ming Ng, School of Professional and Continuing Education, Hong Kong University, Hong Kong Abstract: Over the past two decades, Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland China have experienced significant socio-political changes. As school education plays an important role in helping young people develop proper citizenship and legal values, there has been a change in the formal curricula concerning legal education in these Chinese societies. This comparative study aims to analyze the relevant formal curricula at junior secondary level in the region and to examine the composite images of ‘legal culture’ represented and transmitted by the syllabuses and textbooks in each society, as well as the similarities and differences in terms of legal culture taught in each society. Session 34 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 903 Papers #42 Title: Narrative Imagination, Human Rights, and the Catholic Tradition Author(s): R. W. Carstens, Ohio Dominican University Abstract: Following Martha Nussbaum’s lead that becoming an educated citizen “means learning how to be a human being capable of love and imagination,” this study argues that the Catholic intellectual tradition, particularly its emphasis on the development of narrative and moral imagination, is uniquely designed to produce students with strong civic responsibility as a result of a particular moral understanding of the world. Title: Peer Influence, Religious Beliefs, and Ethical Conduct among Adolescents 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 55 of 134 Author(s): Leslie K. Grier, California State University Co-author(s): Wendy Gudiel, California State University Abstract: In this research, the impact of religious beliefs and peer influence on adolescent conduct is examined. The significance of peer influence on adolescent outcomes is well documented and more often than not, framed as a risk factor. Perceived or actual risk behaviors of friends have been found to be solid predictors of adolescent behaviors. In contrast, religiosity among adolescents is construed as a protective factor whereas diverse measures of religiosity have been associated with positive developmental outcomes. In this study an attempt is made to parse the relative influence of peers to religiosity with respect to pro and anti-social behaviors. Title: Religious Ideals, Cosmopolitanism, and Democracies Author(s): Michael S. Merry, Beloit College Doret J. de Ruyter, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract: In this talk we will argue that most religious persons share with cosmopolitans both an allegiance to their homeland as well as to the world community. Though we will not downplay the manner in which some fanatical religious persons misinterpret and misapply their religious ideals, our focus on religious ideals will illuminate (1) the implausibility of arguments that posit religion as an ipso facto cause for undermining democracy and world order, and (2) the compatibility of espousing religious ideals and demonstrating moral capacities and dispositions of both democratic and world citizenship. Session 35 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 904 Papers # 16 Title: Myth, Story, and Narrative in Modern Rites of Moral Passage Author(s): Robert Davis, University of Glasgow, Scotland Co-author(s): David Carr, Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh, Scotland Abstract: Following a previous (now published) AME presentation on the moral educational implications of art and literature, this paper by Carr and Davis explores the hazards to which modern day young people are prey in finding clear ethical bearings in the face of morally mixed contemporary cultural influences. Following some consideration of the psychology of youth to adult transition, and of anthropological evidence of the way in which the myths, narratives and rituals of traditional societies have assisted such transition, the paper considers the possibilities of analogous contemporary educational resources for such ‘rites of passage’. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 56 of 134 Title: The OC at the AME: Moral Messages in Adolescent Media Author(s): Rebecca J. Glover, College of Education, University of North Texas Co-author(s): Lance C. Garmon, Salisbury University Abstract: This presentation represents a further step in an ongoing investigation regarding the potential of prime time television and/or cable programming to convey moral knowledge to viewers via the cultural stories evident in programs. The same coding scheme utilized in previous analyses using adult and children's programming was employed to analyze a popular television program related to adolescence, specifically The OC. Data analyses involve approximately 180 college students from 2 universities. This presentation will discuss differences between the groups of raters with regard to the content of moral messages perceived as well as information regarding the validity of the coding instrument. Title: Submitting to Liberation: “The Corn is Green” as Anti-Oppressive Pedagogy Author(s): James Stillwaggon , Iona College David Jelinek, Pratt Institute Abstract: The liberation involved in liberatory or anti-oppressive pedagogies is always necessarily conceived from the perspective of the liberator. To that extent, being freed or freeing oneself by means of an educational model always entails submission to the moral order of those empowered to liberate, namely, the oppressors. We analyze key scenes from The Corn is Green (1945) with the aim of locating the domination entailed in educational liberation at the level of the particular commitments of teacher and student. Session 36 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 905 Papers #9 Title: Examining the Relationship Between Cheating and Trust among College Students Author(s): Alesha D. Seroczynski, Bethel College Kathryn Scheid, Bethel College Abstract: The Center for Academic Integrity (CAI; 2002) reports that 70% of all college students admit to some form of academic dishonesty. David Callahan (2004), author of The Cheating Culture, suggests that trust is the key variable influencing the academic integrity of our students. That is, the more one trusts the less likely s/he is to engage in dishonest behavior. Using a modified cheating behavior inventory (Jordan, 2001) and a hierarchy of trust designed for this study, we found support for Callahan’s hypothesis. Results also suggest that cheating behavior may be related to the kind of distrust experienced. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 57 of 134 Title: Attitude of High School Students Towards Moral Education Author(s): Hema Pant, Indira Gandhi National Open University, India Abstract: The present study seeks to examine the attitude of high school students towards moral education in respect of scholastic attainment and introvert extrovert personality. The study was conducted on a group of students from a school where moral education was being taught as a subject since many years. Since the classroom teacher has an important responsibility in molding and actually creating the architects of the nation, it is essential to know the importance of attitude and to assess students’ attitude towards the main aspects of life. Hence the study was undertaken to explore the attitude of different categories of school students towards moral education. Title: Civic Engagement and Moral Development of Undergraduate Honors Students Author(s): Jacqueline R. Klein, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences New York University Abstract: This national study examined the civic engagement activities and moral development of undergraduate students enrolled in honors programs. Findings indicated that the large majority of college honors students were involved in at least one form of civic engagement. Factors that were associated with type of civic engagement were college major and involvement in religious activities. A significant difference was found between participation in political voice activities and type of civic engagement. While the study did not find a significant relationship between civic engagement and level of moral development, college major was found to be associated with level of moral development. Session 37 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 906 Papers #19 Title: Judging In Morally Relevant Situations: A Result of Moral Intuition or Moral Reflection? Author(s): Karin Heinrichs, Ludwig-Maximilian-Universität München, Germany Abstract: Based on a process model of judging (Heinrichs, 2005) an action-theoretical perspective will be explained which can be used as a theoretical framework first to reconstruct Haidt´s and Kohlberg´s approach to moral judging, secondly for pointing out to what types of morally relevant situations both authors referred to. Especially one of the core assumptions defines judging to be essentially influenced by an individually constituted situation. Taking the dominance of the situation for granted would open up new vistas to differentiate Kohlberg´s and Haidt´s approach to moral judging. Title: Intuitive Moral Judgments and Moral Reasoning Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 58 of 134 Albert W. Musschenga, Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands Abstract: Jonathan Haidt introduced a distinction between intuitions or intuitive moral judgments and reasoned or deliberative moral judgments (Haidt 2001). In my paper I want to discuss how these two categories’ judgments relate to each other. Are intuitive judgments about the rightness or wrongness of an action expressions of gut feelings – pre-reflective and uncritical statements that have to be subjected to critical reasoning? This position assumes that reasoned moral judgments are more reliable than intuitive ones. Or are they to be regarded as reliable indicators of reasons pro or contra that action? But how do we know that they are reliable? Title: Stages in Action: A Complex Example From a Politician’s Life Author(s): Don Collins Reed, Wittenberg University Abstract: The Kohlbergian stages of moral development have been taken to be qualitatively different forms of either metaethical or normative ethical reasoning. However, the stages themselves are not theoretical but practical knowledge structures. The presentation will illustrate this claim by describing a complex real-life, interpersonal, political, moral dilemma the author faced when deciding whether to support a neutral mediator’s recommendations concerning wages and health insurance benefits in a union contract with city school support staff (bus drivers, food service workers, building secretaries, custodians, teacher’s aides, etc.). The state agency “Fact Finder” recommended against the proposal of the city school board of which the author is a member. Session #38 2:00 pm-3:15 pm Room: 910 Symposium 53 Title: Assessing Democratic Values: Methodological Challenges and Strategies Author(s): Melinda Fine, Metro Center for Urban Education, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University; Community Involvement Program, Annenberg Institute for School Reform Ethan Lowenstein, Eastern Michigan University Angela Bermudez, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University Abstract: Historically, measures of students’ civic capacity have come chiefly from the field of political science, and have thus tended to assess rather narrowly-defined and developmentally irrelevant indicators of civic commitment (e.g., voting). Civic learning discourse increasingly embraces a broader vision of civic capacity, integrating concepts in moral education, and fostering competency in democratic dispositions, skills, and understandings; still, measurement and classroom practice often lags behind. Sorely needed are classroom practices and assessment strategies that cultivate and measure how students develop and enact democratic values in these multicultural and globally interdependent times. This symposium discusses the theoretical rationale and strategies for assessing students’ civic capacity and teachers’ 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 59 of 134 preparedness to foster that capacity. Blending practice and assessment approaches in moral, civic, and anti-bias education, we focus on students’ deliberation of controversial issues as a means strengthening tolerance, self-efficacy, and civic responsibility. Symposium papers provide a theoretical rationale for deliberation as a critical thinking methodology and describe assessment strategies scholars currently employ in their experimental evaluation of Facing History and Ourselves and in other interventions. Title: Assessing Students’ Democratic Dispositions: Tolerance and Civic Responsibility Author(s): Melinda Fine, Metro Center for Urban Education, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University; Community Involvement Program, Annenberg Institute for School Reform Abstract: Measures for assessing students’ civic competency have increasingly looked for outcomes across a triad of knowledge, skills, and dispositional domains, yet parameters defining each of these domains remains tightly circumscribed. This presentation will discuss how specific pedagogical practices – like deliberation of controversial public issues – can be used to foster acquisition of democratic values in students, and how assessment measures must vary accordingly to capture more nuanced dispositional outcomes. A valid and reliable survey instrument for measuring students’ competency in these domains will be presented. The instrument is currently being used as part of an experimental impact study of Facing History and Ourselves. Title: Developing New Measures of Teacher Efficacy in Civics and Moral Education Author(s): Ethan Lowenstein, Eastern Michigan University Abstract: Research across school subjects has pointed to the influence of teachers’ sense of efficacy on student achievement, motivation, as well as their own sense of efficacy. This presentation will discuss how professional development can impact teachers’ sense of efficacy in teaching that promotes the deliberation of sensitive and controversial issues, social tolerance, and a safe and inclusive classroom environment. A valid and reliable survey instrument for measuring teachers’ sense of efficacy in these domains will be presented. The instrument is currently being used as part of an experimental impact study of Facing History and Ourselves. Title: Five Critical Thinking Tools for Controversial Conversations Author(s): Angela Bermudez, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Education is expected to cultivate democratic citizens by teaching youth to reflect critically about controversial issues, and to dialogue across differences. This paper discusses some of the challenges involved in this task, not simply in nurturing and evaluating the development of critical thinking capacity of individual students, but also in fostering a healthy intellectual dynamic in the classroom that allows students to think 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 60 of 134 critically together. The author proposes five critical thinking tools, discusses their importance for high-quality public talk, and provides examples of how the use of these tools shape the deliberation of a group of high-school students about law enforcement and the legitimacy of using force and violence to solve social conflicts. Session 39 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 909 Papers # 41 Title: The Network of Interdependence as a Basis for Moral Education Author(s): Nobumichi Iwasa, Reitaku University, Japan Abstract: We human beings live in a very complex network of interdependence not only with other human beings, but also with living and non-living things on this earth. This fact constitutes, it can be said, the fundamental basis of our social life and morality, and therefore, the basis for moral or civic education. This presentation will report results of two educational interventions or experiments. They indicate the importance of deepening our awareness as a member of the global network of interdependence, and its implication will be discussed especially in connection with a situation of moral education in Japan. Title: African-American Secondary Teachers and Their Perceptions of Care for Their African-American Students Author(s): Mari Ann Roberts, Emory University Abstract: The teacher-student connection is one of the more powerful pieces of the academic achievement puzzle for students, especially students of color, in present day classrooms. Nevertheless, in today’s desolate climate of privatization, standardization, and corporatization of schooling; the importance of school climate and basic respect for the humanness of education, educators and students has primarily been ignored. This presentation will involve an in-depth discussion of the subaltern stories of “successful” African-American teachers, their teaching, and how they believe their work in creating caring classrooms has resulted in effective, ethical, academically excellent, learning communities for their African-American students. Title: Integrating Moral Education into Junior High Working Class Students’ Resistant Culture: A Case Study of Taiwan Author(s): Yu-Chen Wu, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan Co-author(s): Fwu-Yuan Weng, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan Wei-Lin Tan, National Ping Tung Education University, Taiwan Ming-Lun Chung, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan I-Chien Li, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 61 of 134 We would take the critical perspective to analyze Paul Willis’s “cultural production” theory and use it to explore the subculture of working class family students in junior high school in Taiwan under the influence between cultural hegemony and cultural production. At the same time, we will use integrative moral methods to lead junior high working class(JHWC) students to produce good moral values. The research method of this paper is conducted by the semi-structured interview of students and teachers. We choose six JHWC students by the purposive sampling. The interview is to testify the theory of “culture production” which was put out by Paul Willis and apply the moral education theory to inspect and improve “the Black Box” in the educational field. The other interview is about four teachers. The interview is according to two orientations, Kohlberg’s “just community”, “moral reasoning”, “moral judgment,” “moral discussion,” and Gilligan’s and Noddings’s caring perspective. By the semistructured interview, we hope that the teachers should foster the critical consciousness and take the responsibility as transformative intellectuals to help JHWC students liberate from the dominant school hegemonic culture, establishing school as a just and caring community. Session 26 2:00 pm-3:15pm Room: 912 Papers #33 Title: What Makes a School Democratic? A Nation-Wide Study of School Practices Author(s): Jason J. Barr, Monmouth University Abstract: To date there has been no research on the implementation of democratic schools. This was a nationwide study of the practices that schools implement to establish democracy. Schools differed greatly on their practices to establish democracy and these practices were influenced by the philosophical ideologies of the school, as well as the existing bureaucratic nature of the school system. Schools varied greatly on their approaches to promoting civic engagement and with the issue of respecting the goals of individual students while respecting the goals of the school community. Future research should focus on how these practices affect student outcomes. Title: Cultural Context and the Qualitative Study of Democratic Citizenship Education Author(s): E. Doyle Stevick, University of South Carolina Abstract: In this paper, we review and synthesize the insights from some 20 different recent qualitative research studies (spanning three different edited volumes), which emphasize the cultural particularities of democratic citizenship education. Whether democratic political socialization occurs primarily through the classroom practice of citizenship education, or in other venues from talk circles to saunas, culture continues to mold the particular social relations and practices of democratic citizenship education. To the long conversation about what kind of citizenry is necessary to sustain democratic institutions and a democratic society, and what kind of education is necessary to create such a 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 62 of 134 citizenry, we contribute some of the concepts and findings of the many fields of qualitative research, particularly those centered on culture. Title: Democratic Values and The Social Visions of Aldous Huxley, Part One: The SAT as our Brave New Test Author(s): Ronald Lee Zigler, Pennsylvania State University, Abington Abstract: As Aldous Huxley made clear, Brave New World is less about science and technology per se, and more about the impact of science and technology upon the lives of individuals. This impact is most apparent in education through the use and abuse of standardized testing. One test, however, has emerged as a threat to our society’s democratic values: the SAT. This paper will consider how the emergence and widespread use of the SAT has begun to contribute to the kind of segregated society which both Huxley as well as John Dewey believed were antithetical to democratic values. Session 40 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 908 Papers #11 Title: Activity Theory, Expansive Learning and Research in Moral Education Author(s): Geir Afdal, Ostfold University College, Norway Abstract: This paper is aiming at analyzing the contribution of activity theory to research in moral development and education. Current activity theory has its origin in the Russian culturalhistorical psychological tradition of Vygotsky, Leont’ev and others, but is today drawing on a variety of perspectives. This paper focuses on the theory of expansive learning of the Finnish academic Yrjo Engestrom. The paper consists of two parts: The first is a reading of activity theory on the issue of morality and values. The second is an analysis of how this account can contribute to the understanding of research in moral development and education. Title: A Transactional Approach to Moral Development Author(s): Matthew Pamental, Northern Illinois University, Zulauf Abstract: Several authors have advanced a sociocultural approach to moral education, centered on post-Vygotskian activity theory. However, activity theory has never been able to overcome the dualism of individual and environment. This is problematic because it leaves unexplained the way in which individuals are transformed by their experiences. A transactional approach, taken from the work of John Dewey, overcomes the dualism of subject and environment, and provides a needed corrective to the sociocultural approach. Not only is this model theoretically more appealing, but it also accounts for both the apparent lack of success in, and the possibility of, inculcating strong character. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 63 of 134 Title: Accessing the Moral Zone of Proximal Development in Children Author(s): Val D. Turner, College of Education, University of Missouri, St. Louis Abstract: Transactive discussion, as a discourse model, has been shown to positively affect levels of moral reasoning. Neither instructional strategies, nor age appropriateness, for promoting the usage of transactive discussion has been delineated. The author has developed a three-pronged instructional strategy for young children based upon Vygotskian theory that includes traditional instruction, modeling, and play activities (thinking games). This research represents a pilot study in the development of a transactive discussion thinking game and its impact on the appropriation of transactive discussion. The research also represents initial support of a major Vygotskian construct that instruction can precede and promote development. Break 3:00 pm-3:30 pm Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 3:30 pm-4:45 pm Session 41 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 803 Papers #36 Title: Moral Skill Training: A New Method of Moral Education in Japan Author(s): Yasunari Hayashi, Joetsu University of Education, Japan Abstract: In Japan, we have one moral class a week in elementary and junior high schools. The virtues to be taught are determined by “the course of study”. Therefore, the moral education in Japan is classified as “inculcation”. But acquiring moral virtues does not directly lead to moral action. For this reason, recently the social skill training is used in Japan. However, it is not sufficient for moral education. So, our group proposes the moral skill training. In my presentation, I will show the appearance of the moral skill training in an elementary school by the video, and explain it. Title: A Case Study of Planning, Implementation, and Evaluation for CharacterBased School Culture Author(s): (Angela) Chi-Ming Lee, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan Abstract: This study focused on how to plan, implement and evaluate character-based school culture (CBSC). The purposes were as follows: (1) to conduct a thorough analysis of the theoretical basis of school culture and moral atmosphere; (2) to analyze, integrate and 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 64 of 134 adapt several comprehensive models of character education program into Taiwan’s educational system; (3) to examine the feasibility of planning, implementation and evaluation for CBSC in one Taiwan elementary school;(4) to understand the effectiveness of CBSC project and what factors influenced the planning, implementation and evaluation of said projects ; (5) to make recommendations for the improvement of comprehensive character-based school culture, both in theory and in practice, for Taiwan and other countries. CBSC was inspired by the ideas of justice, caring and positive discipline central to the modern theory of civic and moral education and based on the three facets related to the development of exceptional quality school culture. Additionally, CBSC adopted a number of character education programs implemented in the USA that were later transplanted into Taiwan’s educational system. CBSC is an ongoing project from August 2005 to July 2007. Some initial findings were as follows:(1) CBSC exhibited a number of distinguishing features that displayed its rationale and feasibility;(2) The research results of this study revealed its effectiveness in both qualitative and quantitative terms; (3) This study found several factors, both beneficial and harmful, that influenced the planning, implementation and evaluation of CBSC projects. This CBSC project was based on the input of not only researchers and educators, but also principals, administrative staff, teachers and parents. This CBSC project gave consideration to both in theory and practice, process and product, and qualitative and quantitative methods. Finally, these research results of this project offered certain recommendations on how to apply CBSC as a basis for instilling effective, high quality character-based school culture in Taiwan schools and other countries as well. Title: The Importance of Impressions in Character Education Endeavors Author(s): Matthew Schertz, Pennsylvania State University, Berks Abstract: While character education supporters advocate for high school environments which extol caring, respect and honesty, students are also richly rewarded for individual competitive aspirations while being simultaneously groomed as consumers both within and outside the school. Utilizing Hume’s moral theory, I will provide an analysis of the “impressions” that students receive which reinforce competitive individualism and consumerism. I will contend that effective character education at the high school level is dependent upon teachers being able to facilitate equally powerful impressions, which challenge the rise of the self-aggrandizing subject. Session 42 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 901 Papers #29 Title: The Forgiving Child: Forgiveness Education for Children in Impoverished Communities Author(s): Anthony C. Holter, University of Wisconsin, Madison Co-author(s): Robert D. Enright, University of Wisconsin, Madison Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 65 of 134 This study examined the impact of classroom forgiveness education programs for elementary-aged students in impoverished communities. Forgiveness education is a classroom program based on the Enright Process Model of Forgiveness (Enright, 2001). Forgiveness education programs target anger and depression, which often affect children in urban, impoverished communities. Participants for this study were 125 fifth grade students. Posttest data collection and analyses for this study will be completed in May. Results will be compared to successful interventions with first and third grade students in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and Belfast, Northern Ireland. The design of the forgiveness education program will also be discussed. Title: Adolescence and Violence: Building and Integrating Networks of Protection Author(s): Clary Milnitsky-Sapiro, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Curso de PósGraduação em Educação, Faculdade de Educação, Brazil Carmem Craidy, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Curso de Pós-Graduação em Educação, Faculdade de Educação, Brazil Abstract: In Brazil, we have many regional programs and public policies involving Governmental Organizations, Non Governmental Organizations and a variety of partnerships, which independently, have some alternating positive impact on different poor communities. One factor for its limitations is how rapidly devastating violence is gaining terrain. Moreover, in most of cases, the root of violence itself is multifaceted and usually involves drugs, family neglect, child abuse, and poverty. Therefore, there isn’t a straight line of attacking this generational and social problem, and this paper presents a literature review discussing the main findings and results on this issue. Title: Adolescent Girls’ Relational Aggression: Second Year Follow-up Results of the Bully-Victim-Bystander Dynamic Interaction Model and the Development of Moral Integrity in Action Author(s): Dawn Schrader, Cornell University Co-author(s): Jess Matthews Duval, Cornell University Abstract: Our paper reports results of the second year of a longitudinal study of adolescent girls’ relational aggression in comparison to first year data. We examine girls’ own definitions of social and relational aggression, how they perceive the bully-victim-bystander dynamic, what influences this dynamic, what gets in the way of acting morally in the face of aggression, and how girls may develop and maintain self integrity. We examine moral judgment, reflection, conception of self, peers, emotions, and intuition on thought and action in the face of verbal and nonverbal conflict. We further explore the impact of mothers’ experiences of relational aggression on girls’ experiences and meanings, developing a fuller picture of girls’ interpretation, meaning-making, and action in relationally aggressive situations. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 66 of 134 Session 43 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 903 Papers # 38 Title: Catholic School Pedagogy From/For the Dissent of the Faithful Author(s): Graham McDonough, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education/University of Toronto, Canada Abstract: Dissent is partially constitutive of any conception of education for secular social justice and citizenship. In the publicly-funded Catholic schools in three Canadian provinces, however, socio-moral dissent is also a spiritual issue because the majority of Canadian Catholics disagree with the prevailing Catholic teachings on sexuality, gender, and reproduction. This study uses interviews with fourteen Catholic school religion teachers to sketch a range of responses to student dissent and the challenges of teaching religion in these schools. Finally, it integrates these data with theoretical conceptions of dissent to propose “pedagogy of dissent” as a means toward moral and spiritual growth. Title: Christian Perspectives on Harry Potter: Tool of Satan or Christian Parable? Author(s): Amie Senland, Saint Joseph College Co-author(s) Elizabeth Vozzola, Saint Joseph College Abstract: This study, focusing on differences between fundamentalist (biblical) and liberal Christian families’ perceptions of Harry Potter, is part of ongoing work exploring scriptural-literalism’s influence on parents’ decisions to allow their children to read Harry Potter and how families’ understanding of themes and characters is shaped through the Christian worldview. Parents completed a quantitative measure assessing theme perception and scriptural-literalism and a qualitative measure assessing perception of Dumbledore’s principled reasoning. Children completed similar measures, without questions on faith. Findings for liberal families will be reported and compared with those of biblical participants. Results will be presented in light of their implications for moral education in pluralistic societies in which many families hold strong but divergent religious views. Title: Faith Schools: Communication and Citizenship in a Moral Democracy Author(s): Mark Pike, University of Leeds Session 44 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 914 Symposium# 57 Title: Teaching History, Teaching Ethics, Teaching Democracy Chair/Discussant: Joan Malczewski, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 67 of 134 James W. Fraser, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Diana Turk, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Rachel Mattson, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: Historians in NYU’s Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development have been revising the programs that prepare teachers of History and Social Studies with a view toward strengthening future teachers’ historical knowledge and their abilities to link this knowledge with democratic civic engagement. These papers will report on an ongoing process of building a program that emphasizes the links between historical content knowledge, service learning, dramatic means of engaging students, and what we have come to call democratic civic engagement. Knowing history and seeing oneself as an actor in history are thus connected for the future teachers and for their students. Title: Good History is Good Democratic Civic Engagement . . . and Vice Versa Author(s): James W. Fraser, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: Many today worry that, “Americans don't know their history,” and also that young people are alienated from the larger society from voting and many forms of civic participation. But these two concerns are normally treated quite separately. We have come to believe that these two concerns can be most effectively addressed when linked. As students learn history they see themselves as actors in history. As students are engaged in their communities history begins to seem more worthy of their attention. Title: Democratic Preparation of Democratic Teachers Author(s): Diana Turk, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: The pre-service curriculum for aspiring History/Social Studies teachers has been revised at NYU Steinhardt to emphasize deep links between historical content knowledge and democratic civic engagement. Beginning with a fall orientation in which we lay out the basis what we mean by democratic civic engagement, the program leads students through a revised MA Seminar, with its central focus on civic engagement and teaching for democracy, and features an in-depth service learning project that students complete in schools, with these projects linked to their understanding of social studies teaching. Title: Theater of the Assessed: A Historian Considers the Promise and Challenge of Drama-Based Pedagogies in the History Classroom Author(s): Rachel Mattson, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 68 of 134 Abstract: This paper will explore her contention that theater, specifically the great small works method and process drama provide ways to help students participate in, understand, and engage with historical issues and debates in ways that more traditional forms of instruction and classroom interaction simply miss. Programs that prepare future History/Social Studies teachers that ignore the opportunities of drama limit the reach and potential success of their graduates. Session 45 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Symposuim #59 Title: Racial and Ethical Sensitivity in Teacher Training: A Theory-Driven Model of Applied Ethics Chair(s): Selcuk R. Sirin, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Discussant: Mary M. Brabeck, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract : The Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Test (REST) was originally developed as a videobased measurement tool by Mary M. Brabeck based on James Rest’s four-component model and codes of ethics in school-related fields. In this symposium, we will present three projects that utilized the REST framework and videos in teacher training programs across the United States (U.S.) and in Latin America. The first paper will present findings from an intervention study testing the effectiveness of REST approach in increasing teachers’ ability to recognize ethical violations in school settings in the U.S. The second paper identifies how ethical sensitivity can be assessed and developed in teacher education candidates to improve their ability to identify racial and gender intolerance. The final paper will present the Spanish version of the REST and its implementation in Argentina. We believe that this symposium will give the participants an opportunity to review a theory-driven model of applied ethics in teacher training. Title: Increasing School Professionals’ Cultural Competence: Findings From an Intervention Study Author(s): Lauren Rogers-Sirin, Drew University Kadidja Diallo, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Frank Pignatosi, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This paper will present the findings from an intervention study of Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Training using the REST materials with 57 student teachers. The goal of the program was to increase school professionals’ cultural competence. The workshop was designed 1) to make the relations between professional ethics and cultural competence 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 69 of 134 explicit, 2) to help participants better recognize when a culturally-related ethical violation has occurred, and 3) to provide them with the skills necessary to respond to such violations appropriately. Evaluation of the workshop, in a pre- and post test design showed strong evidence that the participants significantly improved their ethical sensitivity. Furthermore, the participants rated all aspects of the workshops quite favorable and they were almost unanimous in their recommendation that the workshop should be mandatory in teacher education programs. In our presentation, we will share the kit with the audience and specific findings from our study, which will conclude at the end of Spring 2007 semester. Title: Implementing an Ethical Sensitivity Development Program in Teacher Education Author(s): Michael J. Maher, North Carolina State University Abstract: The demographics of American public schools are rapidly changing, yet the teaching force remains relatively unchanged with the majority of teachers and current teacher candidates identifying as white, middle-class, and female. In an effort to bridge the gap between the identities of teachers and students, many teacher preparation programs have developed courses and activities dedicated to exposing candidates to multiculturalism and/or diversity. The literature suggests, however, that still few students may be prepared for diverse encounters once they enter their own classrooms. This paper identifies how ethical sensitivity, a much needed disposition, can be assessed and developed in teacher education candidates to improve their ability to identify racial and gender intolerance. Title: Ethical Sensitivity among Argentinean Teachers: The Spanish Adaptation of Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Test (REST) Author(s): Juan Jorge Michel Fariña, Science and Technique Program (UBACyT), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Gabriela Salomone, Science and Technique Program (UBACyT), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Esteban Costa, Science and Technique Program (UBACyT), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Alejandra Rodríguez Lamberti, Science and Technique Program (UBACyT), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Fernando Pérez Ferretti, Science and Technique Program (UBACyT), Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina Abstract: Since 2003, researchers from University of Buenos Aires (UBA) are working on the Spanish adaptation of the Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Test (REST). The researcher used this new instrument with 150 teachers in Argentina and other Latin American countries. The study will complete in the summer of 2007 and the researchers will provide empirical findings for the first time at the conference. Specifically, this paper will focus on these specific points: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 70 of 134 a. The design of the Universidad de Buenos Aires permanent program on Ethics Education for teachers. b. Cultural and linguistic matters regarding Adaptation of the Spanish-REST for low resource teachers, c. Using the REST as an intervention tool in moral education for diagnosis and training purposes Session 46 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 904 Papers #43 Title: Cooperative Learning: Roles and Opportunities for Civic Education Author(s): Chris Arney, Mathematical Sciences Division, Army Research Office Abstract: As social animals, humans’ natural desire to cooperate helps people learn, become moral persons, and engage in their civic responsibilities. Today's technologies along with progress in cooperative learning help us to develop and utilize these valuable traits more effectively than ever before. The result can be a value-based society characterized by personal responsibility and public interest resulting in social justice and trust. Innovative mathematical structures and processes for cooperation, both for education and life events, are finding their way into society as effective systems bringing new hope for the future of society. This presentation includes examples of the roles that cooperative education and massive collaborations play now and will play in the future and the types of learning and experiences that are and will be needed for our future students to succeed as moral citizens of the world. Title: Kant’s Political Morality and Educating for Cosmopolitan Citizenship Author: Pradeep A. Dhillon, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Abstract: The emerging global order is one where we are caught between the threat of uni-polar global governance, on the one hand, and a fragmented, politically unstable, multi-pointed, often violent, global condition. Educating towards a stable world order, with Kantian cosmopolitan ethics at its heart, I will argue, is the most plausible approach to take towards preparing our children for a world that is increasingly fragile and diverse. Title: Dewey’s Lessons from the War: Implications for Civic and Democratic Education Author(s): Jessica Ching-Sze Wang, National Chiayi University, Taiwan Abstract: One of the controversial events in Dewey’s career as a public intellectual is his support for the US intervention in the First World War. This paper attempts to trace Dewey’s reflections on war-time politics and to explore the implications his experiences have for civic and democratic education in a global society. The paper discusses themes such as the teaching of patriotism in schools, the importance of maintaining dissident culture, the 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 71 of 134 need to teach democracy not as a political form of government but as a personal way of life, and the responsibilities of intellectuals in fostering a global culture of peace. Session 47 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 905 Paper #24 Title: Cognitive and Emotional Dynamics in Moral Motivation and Development Author(s): Ulas Kaplan, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: This paper explores the dynamic nature of moral motivation and emotional experience in moral meaning making from a developmental perspective. In this process, insights and methodology of Deci and Ryan's Self-Determination Theory (1985, 2000) are applied to the study of moral motivation and development. Consistently, Kohlberg's stages of moral reasoning (1969) are reconsidered as stages of motivation. Approximately 300 college students and 75 high school students participated in the study by completing a new questionnaire. Findings revealed developmental patterns of order and variability in emotional experience and moral motivation based on multiple stages, context, and age. Title: On the Significance of the Problem of Moral Motivation Author(s): Gerhard Minnameier, Philosophische Fakultät, RWTH Aachen University, Germany Abstract: The idea of a gap between moral reasoning and action has been prominent in moral psychology. Suggestions of how to bridge it have all focused on the notion of moral motivation. Against this view, it is argued that the role of moral motivation has been largely overestimated and misconceived. Conversely, other (real) problems have been omitted or neglected. Still there appears to be some specific theoretical room for the idea of moral motivation that should be illuminated at the end of the presentation in order to assign moral motivation its proper theoretical and practical role. Title: Moral Imagination to Shape Education Author(s): Azize Özgüven, Faculty of Education, Maltepe University, Turkey Abstract: Education is an art, which refines and sublimates the human being. Through education one is enabled to relate meaningfully to the larger human community. Education starts with self-education. The individuality of the teacher/educator is of more value in transmitting cultural values than any well thought-out curriculum. In our time, the model of selfhood Ricoeur posits is an identity emerging cumulatively and intersubjectively, always mediated by others. “Aiming at the good life with and for others, in just institutions”, says Ricoeur would be realized through “ moral imagination” which brings the capacity for exercising an “enlarged mentality”(Benhabib) that would transfer us to the mental universe of the other culture. It is a transference and hospitality to the cultural milieu governed by the ethical and spiritual categories of “the other”. What is required here is imagination, sympathy and forgiveness lifting the burden of guilt both from 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 72 of 134 ourselves and the others in order to weave the poetics of the moral life at the level of peoples and nations. Session 48 3:30 pm –4:45 pm Room: 907 Film Screening #70 Title: Film Screening of American Idealist: The Story of Sargent Shriver Author(s): Bruce Orenstein, Writer/Director/Producer, Chicago Video Project Anna Gomberg, Outreach Coordinator, Chicago Video Project Abstract: During the 1960s Sargent Shriver’s foundational work with the Peace Corps and the War on Poverty inspired a generation to explore new approaches to service and civic responsibility. In his private life, Shriver was a man of great character and a passionate idealist. This session will consist of a presentation of an upcoming historical PBS documentary, American Idealist: The Story of Sargent Shriver, and a discussion of the film’s utility for moral education. Special attention will be paid to the use of film as a teaching tool, historical figures as moral exemplars, and service-learning and moral development. Session 49 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 910 Symposium # 60 Title: Teacher Growth in Moral Education: The Next Generation of Measures Author(s): Sigrun Adalbjarnardottir, Faculty of Social Sciences, Oddi, University of Iceland Ethan Lowenstein, Eastern Michigan University Robert Selman, Facing History and Ourselves, and Harvard Graduate School of Education Dennis Barr, Facing History and Ourselves Abstract: This symposium will discuss a promising new design framework and model for assessing teacher sophistication in promoting civic, social, and moral growth grounded in developmental and cultural psychology. The model uses a carefully contextualized planned sequence of dilemmas/vignettes about difficult or controversial classroom discussions and interactions to elicit teacher responses. This model is currently being used to design and score measures in the National Professional Development and Evaluation Project (NPDEP), an experimental evaluation of the professional development organization Facing History and Ourselves. Title: Teachers’ Pedagogical Visions: A New Analytical Model Author(s): Sigrun Adalbjarnardottir, Faculty of Social Sciences, Oddi, University of Iceland Abstract: On both sides of the Atlantic educational policy makers call for more emphasis on Education for Democratic Citizenship and Human Rights yet tend to disregard the 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 73 of 134 perspectives of principals and teachers. Key to teachers’ professional growth, and thus to school development, is gaining a better understanding of teachers’ pedagogical visions. For over a decade the author and her colleagues have been developing a framework of teacher professional awareness and development in fostering student social, civic, and ethical awareness and responsibility. In the proposed presentation the author will introduce this framework: its history, evolution, and current status. Title: The Next Generation of Teacher Performance Measures in Civic and Moral Education: Design Consideration and Theoretical Justification Author(s): Ethan Lowenstein, Eastern Michigan University Abstract: The teacher knowledge base with regards to pedagogical content knowledge in civic and moral education has historically been under-conceptualized. Measures that can be used to evaluate teachers’ knowledge, skills, and motivation have lacked the reliability and validity necessary for use in an experimental impact study. This presentation will provide a conceptualization of the teacher knowledge base. It will then describe how this conceptualization is being used in an experimental evaluation of Facing History and Ourselves to design carefully contextualized teaching vignettes/dilemmas to measure teacher cognition and development with regards to promoting student social, ethical, and civic awareness and responsibility. Title: Implications of New Research on the Teachers’ Methods to Deal with Ethical Controversy in the Classroom for Developmental Theory and Moral Education Practice Author(s): Robert Selman, Facing History and Ourselves, and Harvard Graduate School of Education Dennis Barr, Facing History and Ourselves Abstract: The evolution of a line of research on the professional development of teachers to deal with controversial, challenging or difficult discussions, both academic and ethical, in course material and classroom interactions is retraced with a focus on two key questions. First, how can a developmental approach to teachers’ performance skills in moral education deal with variations in context, e.g., climate of a school or classroom, students’ backgrounds and experiences of prejudice? Second, how can such a model help us understand what professional expertise in moral education is, and how to promote the development of such expertise through professional learning opportunities? Session 50 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 802 Papers # 15 Title: Building a Moral Community: The Legacy of Janusz Korczak Author(s): Sara Efrat Efron, National-Louis University Abstract: 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 74 of 134 In the post 9/11 era, as the world slips once again into an abyss of division and hatred, the figure of Janusz Korczak (1878-1942), a Jewish-Polish educator who perished in the Holocaust, looms large. Before and during World War II, a time of racism, murder, and social self-destruction, Korczak believed that children are humanity’s only hope. In the orphanages he conducted, Korczak encouraged individual autonomy and caring relationships within the context of a democratic community where a vision of justice and trust was an integral part of life. The presentation discusses Korczak’s moral education approach and its challenges to contemporary educators. Title: Children’s Attitudes toward Superheroes as a Potential Indicator of Children’s Moral Understanding Author(s): Justin Frank Martin, Graduate School of Education, University of California, Berkeley Abstract: McCrary’s work suggested that superheroes influence children’s development of moral values. Similarly, Bauer and Dettore advocated adults’ and educators’ monitoring of children’s superhero play to help children foster cooperation and conflict resolution skills. The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between children’s attitudes toward themselves and their attitudes towards superheroes. Forty-two fourthgrade children (aged 9-11) from a school in Massachusetts completed a questionnaire. Results indicated that participants generally rated themselves and their superhero as being high on prosocial behaviour. Findings suggest that there may be a relationship between how children feel about themselves and how they feel about superheroes. Title: Transcendence in the Lives of Moral Exemplars: Addressing Moral Psychology’s Blind-Spot Author: Lawrence J. Walker, University of British Columbia, Canada Co-author(s) Jeremy A. Frimer, University of British Columbia, Canada Abstract: Strangely occluded from the purview of moral psychology has been a consideration of the relevance of religion, spirituality, and transcendent faith to moral functioning. This study addresses some of the ambiguities in previous research and presents more definitive data regarding the relationship between these variables and moral functioning. The sample was comprised of moral exemplars (national awardees for either exceptional bravery or caring), as well as comparison participants. They completed a set of questionnaires and participated in an individual interview. Indices of religiosity, spirituality, and faith were derived for analyses. Results indicated that aspects of faith development are most clearly implicated in under-girding caring action. Discussion explores the relationships among these domains. Session 51 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 912 Proposal # 17 Title: A Generation Lost – Biographical Pathways of Female Elders in South Korea Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 75 of 134 Detlef Garz, Johannes Gutenberg University, Germany Hyo-Seon Lee, Kangnam University, Korea Abstract: The present study analyzes the life history of Korean elders in order to understand their biography and the moral burden under which they have suffered. In this study we are going to present results achieved with the help of narrative interviews. The female elders had to live a life without a 'self' under the influence of patriarchal Confucian society and they had to take responsibility for poverty as a collective lifetime impact without having any rights. Our reconstruction shows that their life was one of physical, psychological and emotional hunger coming from nationwide poverty, deprivation of educational opportunities and heavy burden of housework. Title: Marriage and Relationship Education for Poor Couples: Does it Work? Author(s): Josephine Hauer, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families Abstract: Federally funded marriage and relationship education programs have been implemented in a variety of community based contexts that serve economically and culturally diverse populations since 2004 under the Administration for Children and Families Healthy Marriage Initiative. A significant number of projects target individuals and couples in poverty. These programs teach socio-moral competencies and skills including empathy, communication skills and problem-solving strategies as well as the benefits of healthy marriages/relationships for children. The presentation provides an overview of the implementation research to date on these projects highlighting both “lessons learned” and trends in the outcome data. Session 52 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 909 Symposium #61 Title: Triune Ethics: Testing a Neurobiologically-Rooted Moral Psychology Theory Discussant: John Snarey, Emory University Chair(s): Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Triune Ethics Theory (TET) is a neurobiologically-based theory that identifies three ethics rooted in the phylogenetic evolution of the human brain. In paper one, the three ethics (Security, Engagement, Imagination) are described with empirically-derived evidence from neuro and social sciences. The theory proposes that each ethic is dispositionally present in each individual to varying degrees, but can also be situationally primed. In paper two, the dispositional aspects of the three ethics are examined. Paper three describes an experiment in which responses to moral reasoning probes were primed for one ethic or another. Priming successfully influenced moral reasoning reaction time. Title: Triune Ethics Theory: A Neurobiologically-based Moral Psychology Author(s): 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 76 of 134 Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Triune Ethics theory is an interdisciplinary theory with three goals (1) to link moral psychology to neurobiology and affective neuroscience, (2) to explain individual differences in moral functioning, and (3) to suggest the initial conditions for optimal moral development. People can take three types of affectively-based moral stances: the Ethic of Security, oriented to security and focused on self-preservation through safety, and personal and ingroup dominance; the Ethic of Engagement, oriented to emotional engagement with others, particularly through caring relationships and social bonds; and the Ethic of Imagination, which is focused on creative ways to think and act socially. Title: Dispositional Aspects of Triune Ethics Theory Author(s): Bradley Mattan, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Triune Ethics Theory presupposes dispositional tendencies towards one ethic or another, based on childhood and life experiences. We examined the relation of Big-5 personality factors to measures of factors postulated to be related to the three ethics: empathy (Engagement), insight (Imagination), and distrust (Security), among others, including Tomkins’ Polarity Scale and the Moral Chronicity Questionnaire. Indeed, our findings suggest that predicted constellations of personality factors relate to the three ethics. Title: Priming Reasoning for Security or Engagement: Situational Aspects of Triune Ethics Theory Author(s): Nicholas Lynchard, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Bradley Mattan, University of Notre Dame Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Triune Ethics Theory proposes that the emotionally-rooted ethics of TET can be primed by the situation. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three priming conditions: Neutral (visualizing morning routine), Security (death visualization), or Engagement (attachment visualization). Participants read a dilemma and then responded to considerations written at Kohlberg stages 2-6. Actual response times were subtracted from expected response times, based on syllables, and compared to the neutral condition. Significant priming occurred. For example, Security priming increased response times to Stage 3 reasoning indicating that Stage 3 responses were less activated. These and other findings are discussed. 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 77 of 134 Friday Evening Reception Sponsored by Fordham University’s Graduate School of Education Entertainment by NYU Steinhardt Brass Quintet Rosenthal, Kimmel Center, 10th Floor 5:00 pm-7:00 pm Blind Host Dinner Outing in Greenwich Village Meet in the Lobby of the Kimmel Center (Open to All AME Conference Participants) 7:00 pm Journal of Moral Education Executive Board “Working” Dinner Payne Room, Pless Hall 4th Floor 7:00 pm-10:00 pm Saturday, November 17 Helen and Martin Kimmel Center for University Life 60 Washington Square South Registration Desk Open from 8:00 am-5:00 pm Morning Coffee from 8:30 am-10:00 am Plenary Lectures 9:00 am-10:30 am Dr. Pedro Noguera Safety and Caring in Schools: Addressing the Moral Basis of School Discipline Policies 6/19/17 3:08 PM Page 78 of 134 Professor at Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University ROOM: Eisner and Lubin Hall —or— Dr. Patricia Mische, Educating for a Deeper Democracy, Peace and Humanity: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow Professor at Antioch College ROOM: Shorin Auditorium 6/19/17 Page 79 of 134 Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 10:45 am - 12:00 pm Session 53 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 803 Papers #85 Title: Mechanisms of Transformation in the Loss and Recovery of Integrity Author(s): Charles Blakeney, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Ronnie Blakeney, University of Fribourg, Switzerland Abstract: One of the important challenges for moral education is to understand how people recover the potential for learning and growth after the loss of integrity. This paper outlines empirically derived mechanisms of transformation associated with recovering integrity after chronic addiction in a middle class, well-educated population. In the longitudinal research still underway, we observed rigid entrenched patterns of thinking, feeling and behavior, as they transformed through a period of disintegration instability and divergence into a renewed, resilient integrity characterized by increased potential for further growth, that is, a change in the developmental trajectory. Session 54 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 903 Symposium #83 Title: Educating for Dissent and Non-Compliant Citizenship Discussants: Bill Puka, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Elizabeth Vozzola, Saint Joseph College Phyllis Curtis-Tweed, Medgar Evers College of City University of New York Cheryl Armon, Antioch University Los Angeles Abstract: Citizenship education, civic engagement, community service learning, and the like, educate students to be good, contributing members to "the system,” compliant members of "the system.” This is the political or governmental system—the political-economic institutions of one's nation state. The good citizen helps enhance the quality of life for fellow citizens, has her say regarding elected officials and policies, and may even work with others to reform the least democratic or just practices of the Republic. Recently, the good citizenry of the U.S. supported a first-strike invasion of Iraq, leading to the deaths of perhaps 40,000 innocents. Our panel poses approaches for educating "bad" citizens, by contrast—ornery, suspicious, "uncivil" citizens, ready to challenge public officials and their authority for the sake of real democracy. Social membership supplants citizenship status. Democracy involves coming together as social groups to pursue common social interests independent of government—regardless of and despite government. Such citizenship grounds "civil society movements" internationally and grass-roots public interest organizations (non-profits, NGOs) at home, along with citizen watchdog and 6/19/17 Page 80 of 134 social entrepreneurship movements. Democratic citizens don't seek a voice in public policy, but an actual say, consistent with democratic self-rule or self-determination. They take "public servant" seriously, viewing officials as employees of social will, not leaders who shape that will. Come share ideas with us. Session 55 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 802 Symposium #75 Title: The Place of Dialogue in Reconstructing the Cosmopolitan Ideal Author(s): Megan Laverty, Teachers College, Columbia University David T. Hansen, Teachers College, Columbia University Eduardo M. Duarte, Hofstra University Abstract: Human society is moving towards greater global interconnectedness as local communities are becoming more culturally, racially, and religiously diverse. These societal changes call for new habits of human sociability as well as new ideals of identity and community to inform them. Cosmopolitanism is one such ideal because it focuses on communicative solidarity through the acknowledgement of shared human experience. This symposium will explore the role of dialogue in a reconstruction of this cosmopolitan ideal. The first presenter will elucidate and defend a dialogical conception of our humanness, arguing that foreignness is inevitable—with respect to others and the self—as a constitutive part of our relationality. The second presenter will underscore the foundational aspects of cosmopolitan sensibility, arguing that the idea of the cosmopolitan implies a continual founding, in the sense of “founding” a new community or self. The third presenter will explore the uncanny entrance of the “cosmopolitan” idea into the history of philosophy, arguing for a new ontology of learning that arises through a dialogic relation between self (us, nos) and stranger (other, otro). He represents this “relation” as the hidden harmony of the cosmopolitan, the unifying force that enjoins “our” others, strangers (nos/otros) into a community, “us” (nosotros). Title: The Idea of Dialogue as a Way to Understand and Be Human Author(s): Megan Laverty, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: In this presentation the author argues for a conception of the human condition as dialogically constituted. The author will elucidate the idea of dialogue and suggest that it implies the necessity of self and other—as a relationship among, and within, individuals. This relationship underscores foreignness as an inalienable part of human identity and community, speaking to what Hannah Arendt describes as “the difference in our Oneness.” It shifts our focus away from the establishment of foundational human allegiances towards the acceptance of an emergent, contingent and inherently unfinalizable human connectedness. The author suggests that the idea of dialogue fosters tolerance for the ambiguity of our being. 6/19/17 Page 81 of 134 Title: Responding to the Call of Dialogue: Contours of the Cosmopolitan Sensibility Author(s): David T. Hansen, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: The author begins this presentation by acknowledging the important place of dialogue in any meaningful conception of the cosmopolitan. At the same time, the author departs from the dialogical framing urged in the first paper by underscoring the foundational aspects of what the author calls a cosmopolitan sensibility. The author argues that the idea of the cosmopolitan implies a continual founding, in the sense of “founding,” a new community or self. It is a founding of grounds for mutual exchange and solidarity. This process depends upon human sensibilities that are at once both open to the new and selfcritical, while also being critical of the new and self-affirming. The author suggests that a cosmopolitan sensibility generates a solidarity of receptivity: a solidarity emergent through experiencing life educationally. Title: Nos.Otros/Nosotros, Our Others/Us: the Strange Dialogic Arrival of the Cosmopolitan Idea Author: Eduardo M. Duarte, Hofstra University Abstract: This paper, which is inspired by Kant’s important essay Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point of View, explores the uncanny entrance of the “cosmopolitan” idea into the History of Philosophy. The entrance arrives as a strange play of voices: a mysterious stranger who announces “our” Idea, and the voice of “our other” (nos/ostros) who is compelled to respond to the publication/publicity of the Idea. Today the uncanny entry, as I will suggest with my reading of the symposium papers, indicates the mysterious presencing of a new ontology of learning that arises through a dialogic relation between self (us, nos) and stranger (other, otro). The “relation” arises as the hidden harmony of the cosmopolitan, the unifying force that enjoins “our” others, strangers (nos/otros) into a community, “us” (nosotros). Session 56 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 804 /805 Papers #45 Title: Integrating Getting to Yes With Kohlberg’s Approach to Moral Education Author(s): Daniel Candee, Massachusetts Collaborative Law Council Abstract: Roger Fisher, in his seminal book Getting To Yes (GTY), advances a process of negotiation and dispute resolution whose goals and techniques are very consistent with Kohlberg’s process of moral reasoning, yet the two traditions do not reference each other. The goal of this paper is to introduce Fisher’s work to the moral education community and to suggest ways in which it can advance moral education practice and research. 6/19/17 Page 82 of 134 The presentation will describe the five tenants of GTY: (1) separate the people from the problem; (2) focus on interests not positions; (3) invent options for mutual gains; (4) insist on objective criteria; and (5) analyze by BATNA (Best Alternative To a Negotiated Agreement). We will resolve an illustrative dispute showing how the fairest solution is the one which maximizes joint gains. Title: Addressing Conflict in History/Social Studies Classrooms: Possibilities and Moral Challenges Author(s): Deborah Donahue-Keegan, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University Abstract: The process of delving into conflict and controversy in history/social studies classrooms is a key avenue for cultivating perspective-taking capabilities. Teachers who embrace this belief proactively seek opportunities to help students approach conflict constructively in their study of history and current issues. Students are encouraged to develop civic skills, dispositions, and knowledge towards active civic participation (Bickmore, 1997). This paper considers the possibilities and moral challenges involved, as well as the support needed, for teachers who aim to foster socio-moral and civic learning through explicitly addressing conflict – pedagogically, as part of the curriculum and in terms of classroom management. Title: Raw Conflict: Exploring the Middle East with Students Author(s): Gabriel Reich, Virginia Commonwealth University Abstract: This paper proposes a framework for exploring how the use of historical thinking may impact the growth of historical empathy and, ultimately, models for how teachers can approach contentious moral issues. The example used is that of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, which evokes raw emotion in a way that few other international conflicts do. This paper discusses the issues that arose during the curriculum design and teaching of this conflict with diverse groups of pre-service teachers and high school students. As such, it includes both a critical reflection on my own teaching and the learning of my students. Session 57 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 905/907 Symposium #58 Title: New Perspectives on Teaching and Learning History: Investigating the Role of Ethics and Emotions in Historical Inquiry First Author: Alan Stoskopf, School of Education, Northeastern University Co-author(s): Angela Bermudez, Harvard Graduate School of Education Ulrike Hartmann, University of Goettingen, Germany Robert Selman, Harvard Graduate School of Education 6/19/17 Page 83 of 134 Mario Carretero, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain; Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences, Argentina Abstract: Whether at the center of discussions or right beneath the surface, emotions and values often have been a part of history teaching and learning. Pluralistic societies are based on a variety of historical accounts that connect present day experiences with the past. Inevitably, this generates a range of emotional and value-laden responses among students. This symposium addresses how the domains of values and emotions interact with students’ intellectual understandings of history from three different perspectives. Title: Intellectual Rigor, Ethical Reflection and Emotional Engagement in Facing History and Ourselves Author(s): Alan Stoskopf, School of Education, Northeastern University Angela Bermudez, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Our paper analyzes preliminary data from a study of students in the Facing History and Ourselves program. It discusses how the domains of ethical reflection and emotional engagement influence students’ comprehension of core concepts of historical understanding. Students are given a measure that is drawn from the inter ethnic conflict that took place in the former Yugoslavia during the early 1990s and asked to answer a series of item rating, open response, and true and false questions based upon different primary and secondary source accounts. Quantitative and qualitative analyses of student responses from field and pilot test data raise important questions about the role ethical reflection plays in students’ comprehension of core concepts of historical understanding. Title: Understanding Choices in Historical Context – Encounters of Research in Historical Understanding and a Developmental Theory on Social Awareness Author: Ulrike Hartmann, University of Goettingen, Germany Robert Selman, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Teaching and learning history can connect to various aspects of students’ contemporary social and civic learning. The study of the past era around the Weimar Republic serves as one example where students can learn to apply historical understanding to their present actions and experiences. We will present research from a German study using a hypothetical scenario from that period to assess 10th grade students’ capacities to coordinate historical perspectives, and relate these findings to a theory on the development of social awareness, and issues about its contextual manifestations. Title: Could History Teaching in Latin America Contribute to Moral Development? Author(s): Mario Carretero, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain; Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences, Argentina Abstract: 6/19/17 Page 84 of 134 It is generally acknowledged that history education has a strong influence on national identity formation. Previous research has pointed to some difficulties that this connection between history and nationalistic content raise. This presentation will draw on examples of history teaching in different countries of South America, and discuss how two objectives, the development of students’ historical understanding and the formation of a national identity, can turn out to be contradictory with each other. Session 58 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 914 Symposium #52 Title: Multicultural Issues in Civic Education: International Perspectives Author(s): A. Donald Biggs, School of Liberal Arts, Siena College Co-Participants: Robert Colesante, School of Liberal Arts, Siena College Gerald Porter, School of Education, State University of New York, Cortland Patrícia Bataglia, Universidade Bandeirante de São Paulo, Brazil Júlio Rique, Universidade Federal da Paraiba, Brazil Abstract: The folk psychology of a community is a powerful source of citizenship information and is often tainted with the injustices of history. This session will explore the intersection of folk psychology, citizenship, and the common good in pluralistic societies. The first presentation will discuss a folk model of citizenship in the United States that has led to two tracks to citizenship. The second presentation will discuss black oppositional identity as a source of alienation from their role as citizens in a pluralistic democracy. The third presentation will discuss the concept of moral competence as a standard for citizenship in pluralistic societies. The fourth presentation will discuss samples of Northeastern Brazilian adolescents from three different social economic statuses: adolescents attending public schools, adolescents attending private schools and adolescents living on the streets, have responded to an open interview. International perspectives will include the US, Brazil, and Germany. Title: Citizenship and the Common Good Author(s): Robert Colesante, School of Liberal Arts, Siena College Abstract: White and Black Americans at the turn of the 21st century may work together or even go to school together, but for the most part, they do not live together, go to church together or play together. This presentation will suggest that the folk psychology of citizenship in the United States, which developed along side a segregated system of schooling, has supported “two tracks to citizenship.” An important goal of civic education is to assist citizens in having some impact on public affairs consistent with intentions which they develop through a process of rational, moral deliberation. We will argue for citizenship education that provides opportunities for future citizens to learn how to work together to solve common problems. 6/19/17 Page 85 of 134 Title: Multicultural Issues in Civic Education – Black Oppositional Identity and Alienation from Citizenship Author(s): Gerald Porter, School of Education, State University of New York, Cortland Abstract: Home schooling has been one response of African American parents who view schools in the United States suspiciously. With serious achievement gaps and a history of failed efforts to educate their children, parents question whether public schools can adequately prepare their children to have a place at tables that influence public life. This presentation will consider home schooling as recognition by African American parents that schools are likely to provide a track for their child’s journey to citizenship that is qualitatively and psychologically different from that provided to other students. The presenter will argue that any citizenship education programs for poor black students (and to a lesser extent middle class students) must counteract messages in the media that define black citizenship as inconsistent with an inclusive American citizenship. Title: Multicultural Issues in Civic Education – Moral Competence and Citizenship in Brazil Author(s): Patrícia Bataglia, Universidade Bandeirante de São Paulo, Brazil Abstract: Moral competence is important in all societies, especially pluralistic ones where perspectives and arguments may appear different, but derive from common moral principals and reasoning. This presentation will discuss the concept of moral competence as it relates to good citizenship. The presenter will argue that morality cannot be understood as a simple internalization of rules nor as a deflagration of internal dispositions. It is built in the relations established between individual and his/her environment. The public life of citizens and their ability to maintain positive environments will be seen as an important facet of citizenship. The presenter will refer to studies on the moral competence of citizens in Brazil and Germany. Session 59 10:45 am - 12:00 pm Room: 901 Papers #46 Title: Towards a Reclaimed “Critical” Peace Education Author(s): Monisha Bajaj, Teachers College, Columbia University Abstract: The field of peace education is one that includes a diverse array of scholarly perspectives, programmatic considerations, and underlying values. As a term used for a variety of programs, studies, and initiatives, in this paper I argue for a reclaimed “critical peace education” in which empirical study aimed towards local understandings of how participants can cultivate a sense of transformative agency assumes a central role. Attention to research and the renewed pursuit of critical structural analyses (Galtung, 6/19/17 Page 86 of 134 1969) can further the field towards scholar-activism in pursuit of peace education’s emancipatory promise. Title: Relativism for Absolutists: the Role of Moral Reflection in a Multicultural Curriculum Author(s): Steven Cresap, Metropolitan College of New York Louis Tietje, Metropolitan College of New York Abstract: Moral instruction in higher education has been increasingly influenced by a multicultural perspective. This has resulted in a performative contradiction for both teachers and students. Given the importance of tolerance for other’s views, participants in ethical discussions assent to forms of relativism, both descriptive and normative. For many teachers, however, there remain core elements of their disciplines that they consider absolute. Many students come from cultures that do not practice tolerance and are resistant to relativism in crucial ways. This paper describes some of the problems such a situation presents for teaching and learning ethics, drawing on experience in the Values and Ethics curriculum in graduate and professional studies at Metropolitan College of New York. Title: Are Psychopaths Morally Sensitive? Author(s): Bruce Maxwell, Faculty of Education and Social Science, University of Münster, Germany Co-author(s): Leonie LeSage, Faculty of Psychology and Education, Free University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract: James Rest’s four-component model of morality is widely used as an analytic tool for approaching theoretical problems in moral psychology and as a point of reference for identifying objectives in moral education programmes. Drawing on empirical evidence on the moral psychology of the diagnostic category of psychopathy, we argue that Rest’s schema misidentifies moral sensitivity as a predominantly affective moral capacity. Session 60 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 909 Symposium #67 Title: Polity (Not Democracy) as the Moral Aim of Education Chair(s): Robert W. Howard, University of Washington, Tacoma Author(s): Max Riley, Superintendent of Schools, Randolph Township, New Jersey Jennifer Preisman, University of Washington, Tacoma Robert W. Howard, University of Washington, Tacoma Laura Hernandez, Director of Service Learning Programs, Assistant Principal, Shongum Elementary School, New Jersey 6/19/17 Page 87 of 134 Abstract: In his Politics, Aristotle concluded that after examining different constitutional formations of governments, that in rule by many, it is democracy that is the negative form and that polity is the good. This seminar makes an argument for polity as the fundamental aim of education. The authors define polity as the synthesis of principled moral/character education and citizenship education. The first paper presents a theoretical perspective on polity. The second looks at the role of social capital in both education for polity and its relationship with academic achievement and how service-learning can contribute to both social capital and academic achievement. The third paper examines how service-learning can be created in K-12 settings to promote social capital, moral education, and academic achievement. Title: Education for Polity (Not Democracy) Author(s): Robert W. Howard, University of Washington, Tacoma Jennifer Preisman, University of Washington, Tacoma Abstract: In his Politics Aristotle concluded, that after examining different constitutional formations of governments, that in rule by many, it is democracy that is the negative form and that polity is the good. In this paper we ask, what it would be like if we took Aristotle and his definitions of democracy and polity seriously and how it might affect citizenship eduction? Might we come to conclude that citizenship education (like the form of constitutions Aristotle studied) has two types and that democratic education as a means of citizenship is negative and that we should embrace an education for polity? Title: From Citizenship to Student Achievement: Getting There From Here Author(s): Max Riley, Superintendent of Schools, Randolph Township, New Jersey Robert W. Howard, University of Washington, Tacoma Abstract: In the current standards-based environment in K-12 schools, moral education and citizenship education are frequently seen as second-class and inferior educational goals. However, research shows that the strength of a community is a better predictor of student achievement than either a community's racial or economic characteristics. This presentation will examine social democracy (especially social capital) and its role in promoting civic engagement AND the academic success of citizens in those communities. This paper will examine the educational and teaching strategies and their ability to promote strong communities and social capital including: academic servicelearning, moral education, and programs for increasing protective factors. Title: Service-Learning for Academic Success, Social Capital, Citizenship, and Morality Author(s): Laura Hernandez, Director of Service Learning Programs, Assistant Principal, Shongum Elementary School, New Jersey Abstract: 6/19/17 Page 88 of 134 Academic Service-Learning is a teaching strategy that uses community service experience to teach academic curricula. The participatory and experiential nature of service-learning promotes civic engagement and moral education. Many of the needs addressed in service are ethical (e.g., hunger and homelessness). This paper will examine the creation of service-learning programs in K-12 environments to succeed and to promote citizenship and moral development. Session 61 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 904 Papers #27 Title: Coaches as Moral Educators: Raising the Bar in Youth Sports Author: Cheryl Armon, Antioch University, Los Angeles Co-author(s): Stephen Venables, Los Angeles Sports Foundation Abstract: This pilot study examines the hypothesis that learning student-centered instructional strategies will allow coaches to promote not only the physical development and skill enhancement of their players, but also players’ ethical development. In addition to assessing player development and performance, the study examines some relationships among coaches’ development and coaches’, players’, and parents’ sideline behavior during competitive game situations. 80 male and female student athletes will compete in a basketball league in which half of the volunteer youth coaches will have participated in a series of educational workshops that emphasize mutual respect, Socratic questioning, decision-making, planning, and fair play. Title: Children and Adolescents Conceptions of Personal, Social, and Moral Issues Author: Jennifer Cole Wright, University of Wyoming Abstract: Is tolerance for diversity influenced by whether children/adolescents view different beliefs as involving personal, social, or moral issues? When asked to categorize 30-40 issues, 4th-12th graders were most accepting of different personal beliefs, moderately accepting of different social beliefs, and less accepting of different moral beliefs. Children were significantly less tolerant than adolescents of different beliefs regardless of issue classification and yet demonstrated significantly more variation in tolerance between issue classifications. Adolescents were significantly more willing to interact with/help teenagers with different beliefs when they disagreed about a personal/social issue rather than a moral issue. Gender differences in adolescents were found. Title: The Use of Forgiveness Education with At-Risk Adolescents Author: Suzanne Freedman, University of Northern Iowa Abstract: This paper will describe the use of a forgiveness education program designed to help atrisk adolescents deal with deep, personal, and unfair hurts. Results illustrated that the 6/19/17 Page 89 of 134 forgiveness education was effective in promoting forgiveness in the participants as well as increasing feelings of hope and self-esteem and decreasing anger and anxiety. Specific challenges associated with educating a population of at-risk adolescents about forgiveness will be highlighted. This paper will conclude with examples of verbal reports from students describing what they learned from the forgiveness education. The importance of including forgiveness education in both the traditional and non-traditional school curriculums will be emphasized. Session 62 10:45 am-12:00 pm Room: 910 Papers # 20 Title: From Our Needs to Our Norms: Ontogeny Meets Teleology Author(s): Joan F. Goodman, Graduate School of Education, University of Pennsylvania Abstract: The story of Helen Keller pits a child's present "needs," as perceived by her mother, in conflict with latent future "needs," as perceived by her teacher. The two response styles are a metaphor for the dual obligations of educators. To be effective, a moral education theory should attend to the drives and desires of children and to our social and educational aspirations for them, both developmentally staged. The complexity and interaction between the child's ontogeny and teleology is discussed in terms of Kohlberg's justice theory, with its emphasis on destiny, and Noddings' caring theory, with its emphasis on needs. Title: Ideals from the Good (A)moral Life Author(s): Stijn Sieckelinck , University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Doret de Ruyter, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract: “Practical idealism” is very popular among adolescents. Moral ideals are pursued on a smaller scale and youngsters tend to pursue moral ideals in a personal mode and for prudent reasons as well. We defend the position that educating children for the good life should encompass what we call (a)moral ideals, combining other-regarding and selfregarding ideals and similar motives for pursuing them. As the double motivational basis has strong appeal, and because (a)moral ideals also have a moral character, moral education should not focus exclusively on moral ideals to make moral ideal outcomes possible. Title: The Politics of Moral Education: A Chinese Example Author(s): Tianlong Yu, School of Education, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville Abstract: As moral development is largely a socio-cultural process, moral education is always politically charged. China provides a revealing example of the connection between politics and school moral education. Documenting the history of moral education in communist China, this paper explores how various political ideologies, including Confucianism and communism, have influenced the policies and practices of Chinese 6/19/17 Page 90 of 134 moral education and how the central government has supported various moral education movements in order to achieve the purpose of political control. Lunch with Carol Gilligan Eisner & Lubin Auditorium, Kimmel Center: 4th Floor 12:45 pm - 1:45 pm Plenary Address 12:45 pm - 1:45 pm Kimmel Center, Eisner & Lubin Auditorium, 4 th Floor Carol Gilligan Psychologist and Professor at Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development and School of Law, New York University John Snarey, Introduction “The Scarlet Letter: A Play Inspired by Hawthorne’s Novel” Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 2:00 pm-3:15 pm Session 63 2:00 pm – 3:15 pm Room: 803 Papers # 7 Title: Moral and Civic Consciousness Among National Service Participants in Malaysia. Author(s): Vishalache Balakrishnan, Faculty of Education, University of Malaya, Malaysia Abstract: The general purpose of this paper is to discuss the moral and civic consciousness inculcated among youngsters selected and attending the National Service Training Program in Malaysia. The National Service Training Program started in the year 2004, that is, after the Malaysian Parliament agreed on the execution of the program which foresees the below as the objectives of the program: 1) increase the patriotic spirit of the younger generation; 2) instill racial harmony and national integrity; 3) form positive character through moral values; 4) develop volunteerism; and 5) create a younger generation that is active physically, mentally and filled with self confidence. However, many parties through the media and in public have become dissatisfied with the National Service Training Program in which 3-month training is being offered to selected 18-year olds through four training modules. They are the physical module, nationhood module, character-building module, and community service module. Since it is a new training program, research on moral and civic consciousness inculcation have 6/19/17 Page 91 of 134 not been carried out so far. With the findings supplied by this study and future ones, soon the department involved in implementing this program will be better able to face challenges and obstacles in carrying out the program. Title: Student Rights and Human Rights Education- Taiwan’s Experience Author(s): Chia-Fan Lin, College of Education, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan Abstract: In the article, it will be argued that human rights education in terms of student rights is a good approach especially for countries such as Taiwan where some old traditional and cultural conventions are hindering the implementation of human rights education in school. It could offer a good way to channel the ideas into the school practices based on the traditional values and affect human rights issues, which are not remote or foreign but immediate and local and need to be addressed and taken into action in terms of legal protections. Therefore, the values of human rights can be translated into practical actions, which are no more abstract in words, but real in actions for students. In addition, Taiwan’s experience will be discussed in terms of legislation, formal, and informal curriculum, and teacher training program. Title: The Sprout of Taiwanese Democratic Education Author(s): (Jennifer) Chin-Chueh Wang, College of Education, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan Abstract: The purposes of this study were to explore the effect of colony education in Taiwan during Japanese governing period, and to complement it with the analysis of the democratic connotation in “citizen and morality” textbooks at Taiwanese high schools during the period of KMT (“Kou Ming Tang” Party) governing. By reviewing the education policy and “morals” textbooks during the period of Japanese governing in Taiwan and analyzing “citizen and morality” textbooks of KMT government during the period of promulgating and abolishing curfew and martial law, we discovered much obvious evidence of anti-democratic education connotations still hidden in textbooks. Session 64 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 802 Symposium # 78 Title: Selfish or Fair: Integrating Economic Game Theory and Moral Development Author(s): Monika Keller, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Thomas Canz, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Michaela Gummerum, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom Tina Malti, University of Zurich, Switzerland Katrin Rust, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Yaniv Hanoch, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom Kimberly Schonert-Reichl, University of British Columbia, Canada 6/19/17 Page 92 of 134 Title: Sharing from Childhood to Adulthood: Negotiation Strategies and Outcomes Author(s): Monika Keller, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Thomas Canz, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Michaela Gummerum, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom Abstract: Sharing behavior was assessed in an experimental setting of behavioral economics. Participants of five different ages from childhood to adulthood decided individually and in a group of three how to share a sum of money with an anonymous other group (dictator-game). Negotiations were videotaped and analyzed. Equal split was a predominant simple fairness heuristic; groups gave less than individuals; university students were most selfish. Arguments in discussion were categorized. Younger persons used more simple, selfish, or fairness arguments. Arguments that served to support more selfish sharing (justifications, excuses) became more complex with age. Title: Moral Emotions and Morally Relevant Behaviors in Childhood Author(s): Tina Malti, University of Zurich, Switzerland Abstract: Although the role of moral emotions in morally relevant behaviors has been theoretically acknowledged, not much research in early and middle childhood has been conducted so far. The present study therefore investigates the role of moral emotions (i.e. sympathy and moral emotion attributions within the happy-victimizer paradigm) in kindergarten children’s prosocial and morally relevant behaviors. Data of six-year old Swiss kindergarten children, their parents, and kindergarten teachers are used. Overall, the findings give evidence for the importance of moral emotions in children’s morally relevant behaviors. The findings are discussed with regard to pedagogical interventions. Title: Preschool Children’s Moral Emotions and Prosocial Behavior in Dictator Game Author(s): Michaela Gummerum, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom Monika Keller, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Katrin Rust, Max Planck Institute of Human Development, Germany Yaniv Hanoch, School of Psychology, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom Kimberly Schonert-Reichl, University of British Columbia, Canada Abstract: Two studies explored the relationship between prosocial behavior in the dictator game and moral emotions among 2- to 6-year-old preschool children. In study 1, German children’s moral judgment and their emotion attribution to a violator of a moral rule (happy victimizer task) both independently predicted sharing behavior in dictator game, but did not predict teacher ratings of participants’ prosocial behavior. In study 2, Canadian preschool children’s empathy significantly predicted prosocial behavior in dictator game. General emotion comprehension was not related to prosocial behavior. 6/19/17 Page 93 of 134 These results are discussed in relation to psychological and economic theories of moral behavior. Session 65 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 901 Papers #35 Title: Moral Judgment Stage Development Across Culture: Revisiting Kohlberg’s Universality Claims Author(s): John C. Gibbs, Ohio State University Karen S. Basinger, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Urbana University Rebecca L. Grime, Washington & Jefferson College Abstract: Is moral judgment development basically the same across diverse cultural groups? Perhaps no developmental psychologist has advanced the thesis of moral judgment development across cultures more boldly and extensively than did Lawrence Kohlberg. Our aim is to revisit Kohlberg’s generic claim that, in principle, there is a cross-cultural universality to the development of moral judgment, as well as to mediating social perspective-taking processes and moral values. This study reviewed Kohlberg’s universality claims with research that collectively used MJI and SRM-SF moral judgment measures. Comprising Snarey’s (1985) MJI database were 45 studies conducted in 27 countries. Comprising the present SRM-SF database are 72 studies conducted in 23 countries. Collective inclusion of the different (dilemma and non-dilemma) methods made possible not only a replication (or non-replication) but, more importantly, a multimethod extension (Brewer & Hunter, 2006) in the study of the moral universality question. The 42 countries collectively surveyed in the reviews range from Guatemala to Germany, from India to Italy, from New Guinea to Nigeria. Our collective survey using the multimethod extension provided some consensus—more precisely, some convergent evidence across methods—but also revealed some continuing controversies and the need for further research (using both production and recognition measures) regarding basic moral values, stages, and social processes. Title: The Impact of Democratization on Moral Judgment Competence: The Case of Poland (1977-1982) Author(s): First Author: Ewa Nowak, University of Poznan, Poland Co-author(s): Georg Lind, University of Konstanz, Germany Abstract: Yet unpublished findings from the international comparative survey of university students in five European countries (FORM-project; Bargel et al., 1982) show a surprising development of moral judgment competence in the Polish sample, which contrasts clearly with other countries like Germany. Between 1977 and 1979 the moral competence score (MJT's C-score) of Polish students increased strongly from 22.5 to 6/19/17 Page 94 of 134 37.5 (note: only MJT's mercy killing dilemma was used in Poland). This was a much bigger increase than in German university students whose C-score increased only 3 points during the same period of time. But then, between 1979 and 1981, a sharp regression occurred: the median C-score (MJT) of the Polish descended back to a low of C-score of 24 while the C-score of the German sample remained stable (between 5th and 9th semester) and later increased further by three C-points. What has caused these dramatic changes in moral judgment competence in the Polish university students? What first comes to mind as an explanation is the democratic movement in Poland in the late 1970’s and, as a reaction, the military coup in 1981, which ended it. In this paper we discuss the impact of this movement on the cognitive and affective aspects of moral development of the Polish students. We will differentiate these impacts into three levels: (1) Macro social level: political, civil, and religious events having sizable consequences for a whole society (formation and downfall of a free labor union “Solidarity”, the appointment of a Polish Pope, the Jaruzelski-coup). (2) Middle social level: studies and social relations in the academic milieu. (3) Personal level: for example, a frustration because of a divide between the abstract knowledge and the real work relations in the socialistic economy. Session 66 2:00 pm – 3:15 pm Room: 903 Symposium # 82 Title: Democracy on Demand, not Democracy by Consent: Educating for "Bad" Citizenship Author(s): Bill Puka, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Co-authors: Cheryl Armon, Antioch University, Los Angeles Ann Hawthorne Abstract: These "truths" are made evident: The prevailing notion of democracy as a republic with a centralized government is fundamentally undemocratic. Democracy is a social, notpolitical phenomenon: government is a pervasively undemocratic institution (even in a democracy) that deals in enforcement (coercion). Majority rule, rights protection, dissent, elections, petitioning government for grievances, tri-partite governments with an independent executive branch, and checks and balances - these are characteristic of (limited) monarchies. For example, all these features were dominant in the British monarchy that America fought in the American Revolution. Only tax voting—the ability to pay or withhold taxes selectively regarding specific national policies (combined with strict limits on government borrowing power) - provides the People self-rule. Good citizenship - the conscientious fulfilling of civic duties - is antithetical to democracy and requires social members to be basically suspicious and challenging to government power at all levels and at all times. A democracy-friendly version of tri-partite government would posess an independent judiciary and two "People's Houses": (a) an elected Congress for parliament with a prime minister; (b) a People's Counsel—elected managers or supervisors for congressional members ("rank-and-file employees"). In a democracy, elected "officials" can never become more official or authoritative than any individual citizen. Their 6/19/17 Page 95 of 134 leadership comes only in the form of consultants to the public on social policy-servant or steward leadership. Any stronger leadership infringes self-rule. Self-rule cannot be achieved by consenting or rejecting already crafted government policies, or chosen political party candidates. It is not to rubber stamp, or to have a say, but to be heeded; it is the private-sector "bossing around" of public employees or servants. Session 67 2:00 pm-3:15 pm Room: 909 Symposium #67 Title: The 4Rs Program: A Collaboration of Practitioners and Researchers in School-Based Conflict Resolution Discussant: Robert Selman, Harvard Graduate School of Education Author(s): Tom Roderick, Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Maria D. LaRusso, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This symposium includes three papers that focus on a collaborative program of practice and research in the area of school-based social and character development. The first paper describes the Reading, Writing, Respect & Resolution (4Rs) Program including the program’s history, current practice, and program implementation successes and challenges over the course of the research study. The second paper describes the evaluation of the 4Rs Program, including the program theory, study methods and design, and experimental impacts of the program on children, teachers, and classrooms over two consecutive school years. The third paper describes a mixed method sub-study that examines the climate of participating elementary schools as whole contexts composed of smaller micro-contexts, including classrooms, lunchrooms, playgrounds, hallways. This group will be joined by an expert discussant in the area of school-based social-emotional learning and conflict resolution. Title: Reading, Writing, Respect and Resolution, The 4Rs Program Author(s): Tom Roderick, Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility Abstract: The 4Rs Program (Reading, Writing, Respect & Resolution) is a universal, school-based intervention that provides training and ongoing coaching for teachers in grades K-5 to effectively teach a comprehensive curriculum in literacy development, conflict resolution and intergroup understanding. The program uses high quality children’s literature to 6/19/17 Page 96 of 134 provide a pedagogical link between the teaching of conflict resolution and the teaching of fundamental academic skills. Title: Experimental Impacts of the 4Rs Program on Children’s Social-Emotional and Academic Functioning Over the Course of Two Years Author(s): Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Co-author(s)(s): Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This paper describes the evaluation of the 4Rs Program, including the program theory, the methods and design of the study, and experimental impacts of the program on children, teachers, and classrooms over two consecutive school years. Title: The Challenge of Assessing and Changing School Climate: Understanding the Complexities of Schools as Whole Units Composed of Multiple Contexts Author(s): Maria D. LaRusso, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Co-author(s)(s): Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This mixed method study examines the climate of elementary schools as whole contexts composed of smaller micro-contexts, including classrooms, lunchrooms, playgrounds, hallways, etc. Analyses revealed large variation across school micro-contexts in childadult relationships, peer interactions, and support from adults for resolving conflicts. For example, the same students sometimes have highly positive relationships with adults in one setting and highly negative relationships with adults in other settings. Results demonstrate how understanding the complexities of the multiple contexts within schools is essential for successful implementation of school-based interventions and for advancing theory and assessment of school settings as an important developmental context. Session 68 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Symposium #63 Title: Dilemmas and Hierarchical Complexity in the Study of Moral Development Chair(s): Ean Stuart Bett, Harvard Extension School, Harvard University 6/19/17 Page 97 of 134 Abstract: The study of moral development is applicable to many areas of life. In this symposium, we bring together several related efforts that demonstrate how an individuals’ moral understanding may be determined by stage of development, as defined by the Model of Hierarchical Complexity (MHC). We start by examining data collected over a series of studies with variable demographic populations that look at how stage of development may influence the understanding of specific moral dilemmas. However, it is also possible that specific vignettes in the moral dilemmas can be scored differently by participants, despite their similarity in stage as defined by the MHC. The combined data came from participants who completed the following moral dilemmas:1) The Helper-Person Problem 2) The Incest Dilemma In Favor 3) The Incest Dilemma Against 4) The Death Penalty Case and 5) The Stoning Case. The second paper in the symposium looks at how moral reasoning could be developed in a political setting. By using the MHC to guide group discussions, the average stage of development increased. This was shown in a qualitative matter by the group culture transforming from a fragmented, negative tone to a coherent, deliberative one. The third contribution to this symposium examines Kohlberg’s cognitive-developmental moral stage theory. This theory was examined through the use of the MHC and several moral dilemmas, which showed that test items were supporting moral reasoning stage, as defined by Kohlberg. Title: Finding the Relationships Among Moral Developmental Measures Using the Model of Hierarchical Complexity and Rasch Analysis Author(s): Ean Stuart Bett, Harvard Extension School, Harvard University Carrie Melissa Ost, Dare Institute Michael Lamport Commons, Harvard Medical School, Harvard University James Meredith Day, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium Terri Lee Robinett, College of the Desert Sara Nora Ross, ARINA Inc. Helena Marchand, University of Lisbon, Portugal Maria Judith Sucupira da Costa Lins, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Abstract: People may understand moral dilemmas in different ways depending on their stage of development, as shown by their preferences for interpretations. This study analyzed items from the following instruments to help determine the relationship between stage of development and interpretation of moral dilemma: 1) The Helper-Person Problem 2) The Incest Dilemma In Favor 3) The Incest Dilemma Against 4) The Death Penalty Case and 5) The Stoning Case. Participants rated the quality of arguments on a 1 to 6 scale. A Rasch analysis produced stage scores for each of the stories, which were regressed against the hierarchical complexity of each of the stories. A factor analysis was then conducted to determine if the scales loaded and their various implications. Title: Effects of a Structured Public Issues Discourse Process on Individual and Group Moral Development Author: Sara Nora Ross, ARINA Inc. 6/19/17 Page 98 of 134 Abstract: This study was about adult and political development and its findings may inform methods for fostering moral development in individuals and groups. Participants in this study wanted to address the local community’s long-adversarial ways of relating. The group sessions and the pretest and posttest interviews generated data that were scored using the Hierarchical Complexity Scoring System. The group’s moral reasoning developed by the end of the study. The group’s culture transformed from a fragmented negative tone to a positive, coherent, deliberative tone. The study informs research into fostering adult moral development while increasing the coherence of public discourse, improving public deliberation, and the role of structured public discourse about complex issues in fostering political development. Title: Comparing Moral Reasoning Instruments Using the Model of Hierarchical Complexity and Rasch Analysis Author: Terri Lee Robinett, College of the Desert Abstract: This study provides empirical evidence for Kohlberg’s cognitive-developmental moral stage theory. It utilized the Model of Hierarchical Complexity (MHC) to relate an individual’s performance on multiple measures of moral reasoning to a mathematical order of hierarchical complexity of items. Rather than using standard performance-based tests of moral reasoning, such as the Defining Issues Test (DIT), or the Moral Judgment Test (MJT), this study utilized moral dilemmas from these measures and specific items typically used to measure the responses. The hierarchical complexity of each item was determined. A factor analysis and regressions of Rasch stage scores on hierarchical complexity of items supported that test items were measuring moral reasoning stage, providing support for Kohlberg’s stage theory. Session 69 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 904 Papers # 14 Title: The Dimension of Seriousness in Moral Education Author: Merete Wiberg, University College Lillebaelt, Denmark Abstract: To mean seriously what you are saying and doing is a dimension of being a moral person due to the establishment of a relationship between the person who acts and the moral action. Therefore, seriousness as a kind of unfolding of freedom is an important value of moral education. In the paper, the author, inspired by Dewey, Gadamer and Lovibond, will define and discuss seriousness as a value of practice in moral education while focusing on the relationship between seriousness and freedom as moral values which constitute what it means to be a moral person. Title: Imaginary Literary Worlds and Moral Education Author(s): First author: 6/19/17 Page 99 of 134 Geoff Madoc-Jones, Faculty of Education, Simon Fraser University, Canada Co-author(s): Robert Manery, Faculty of Education, Simon Fraser University, Canada Abstract: The contribution of literature to moral education is located within the reader's interpretive experience of literature, whereby the reader engages with the proposed world of the text distanced from the psychological intentions of the author and the sociological conditions of its production. This engagement creates the necessary conditions for selfunderstanding. The central role of narrative identity in the development of the ethical self has been discussed by a number of theorists. However, Ricoeur's discussion of distanciation and threefold mimesis has received less attention despite their fundamental importance in the creating the conditions that allow for the hermeneutic experience of literature. Title: The Non-Instrumental Contribution of the Arts to Moral and Spiritual Formation Author(s): Panagiota Sidiropoulou, Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh, Scotland Co-author(s): David Carr, Moray House School of Education, University of Edinburgh, Scotland Abstract: The arts have been subject to some curricular marginalization in view of more recent (worldwide) emphases on the economic and vocational goals of education and schooling. In this light, it has been common to construe the educational value of the arts in more or less instrumental terms. On the basis of a rather different non-instrumental conception of the contribution of the arts to human understanding, Sidiropoulou and Carr explore the extent to which current provision for art and aesthetic education in Scotland and Greece (and perhaps elsewhere) has failed to appreciate the potential of the arts for wider moral and spiritual education and formation. Session 70 2:00 pm-3:15 pm Room: 914 Papers #3 Title: Future Scenarios; A Key to Young People’s Civic Engagement? Author(s): Helen Haste, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University; University of Bath, England Amy Hogan, University of Bath, England Abstract: Several researchers have argued that perceptions of the future reflect a general positive or negative perspective of the democratic process, and that this will serve as a motivating factor in civic engagement, and as an organising element in civic and ethical values. This paper reports data from 1136 British young people aged 11-21. Quantitative material explores the relationship between four different scenarios of the future, a range of value items relating to ethical and civic issues, sense of personal efficacy and responsibility, 6/19/17 Page 100 of 134 and recent and projected future civic activities. Qualitative material demonstrates the patterns of perceptions of the future and the dominant preoccupations; gender and age effects are discussed. Title: Teaching Global Citizenship to Japanese University Students Author(s): First Author Robin Sakamoto, St. Paul’s University, Japan Abstract: University students today need the ability to solve problems through peaceful negotiation and to recognize and acquire “global citizenship.” This presentation will describe a course on global citizenship taught in one of Japan’s private universities to students who will work in the field of international development. The meaning of global citizenship is defined through the presentation of student work and actual lesson material. The course was developed by the presenter and uses Noddings’ (2005) Educating Citizens for Global Awareness as the primary text. Future plans include research on how moral development is effected by exposure to learning about global citizenship. Title: Can Young Adolescents Be Cosmopolitan Agents of Community Change? Author: Theresa K. Sullivan, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University Abstract: Democracy in a cosmopolitan society requires that people with diverse interests come together to identify shared sociopolitical goals and co-construct workable plans to achieve those goals in a multicultural environment. An analysis of the sociopolitical change strategies of 90 middle school youth demonstrates that young adolescents are capable of generating inclusive, deliberative strategies for community change. And yet most tend toward more unilateral approaches. This paper offers insights to help educators and program providers meet young adolescents where they are and begin to expand their strategic repertoires to include the kinds of strategies required for democracy in a cosmopolitan society. Session 71 2:00 pm–3:15 pm Room: 905 Papers # 22 Title: Academic Environment in High School and Moral Competence Author(s): Patrícia Bataglia, Universidade Bandeirante de São Paulo, Brazil Co-author(s): Marcia Schillinger-Agati, University of Konstanz, Germany Georg Lind, University of Konstanz, Germany Luciana Augusta Gomes Haddad, Universidade Bandeirante de São Paulo, Brazil Abstract: The origin is a questionnaire validated to the Portuguese language by Schillinger-Agati (2006) to be used in evaluations of academic environments at the university level. It was used to correlate academic environments to Moral Competence (using MJT) results in 6/19/17 Page 101 of 134 three courses: medicine, business administration and psychology. In this opportunity, the authors are presenting the validation of the same instrument to the high school and to teachers of the same level. In addition to this, a correlation to MJT results was done. 90 students and 15 teachers were submitted to both MJT-xt and Origin-hs (high school). This paper will present the results of the validation process and the correlation study. Title: Designing and Validating a Computer-animated Moral Reasoning Test for Young Children Author(s): Yuejin Xu, Murray State University Abstract: This study presents a computer-animated moral reasoning test, which is developmentally appropriate for young children. In this computer-animated moral reasoning test, young children will play a moral reasoning game in which moral dilemmas are presented to them through visual animation and verbal prompts. Their actions and responses to a series of tasks will be recorded and from this record an indicator of moral reasoning will be generated. We plan to use this computer-animated moral reasoning test among a group of young children. The psychometric properties of the computer-animated moral reasoning test will be reported. Title: Exploring Aquino and Reed’s Measure of Moral Identity Author(s): Steve Thoma, University of Alabama Co-author(s): Jenifer Short, University of Alabama Vin Porter, University of Alabama Abstract: Aquino and Reed (2002) propose a measure of moral identity built around a set of moral traits. Underlying this procedure is the claim that individuals vary in the degree to which the importance of these moral traits define the self. The current study assesses the properties of the instrument in a sample of social science and education majors. We also address whether individual differences in moral identity can be explained, in part, by developmental phase indicators: consolidation and transition in moral judgment development. Findings suggest that the Aquino and Reed measure has limited variability in this population. Further, developmental phase was related to the complexity of the description of one’s moral social identity but not to the summary or scale scores. Session 72 Papers # 84 2:00 pm – 3:15 pm Room: 804/805 Title: Moral Development and Democratic Attitudes: Are There Developmental Pre-Sets for Sympathies Toward Terrorists and Terrorist Acts? Author(s): James Meredith Day, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium Abstract: 6/19/17 Page 102 of 134 NEED ABSTRACT Title: The Enstranged Self Recovering Some Grounds for Pluralism Author(s): James Conroy, University of Glasgow, Scotland Abstract: NEED TO FIND ABSTRACT Paper Presentations and Symposium Sessions 3:30 pm-4:45 pm Session 73 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 802 Papers #23 Title: Quick-REST: A Measure of Cultural Competence as an Ethical Responsibility First author: Selcuk R. Sirin, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Co-author(s): Lauren Roger-Sirin, Drew University Brian A. Collins, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: In this paper, we will present findings from a survey-based study of 237 school professionals. The goal of the project was to explore demographic, educational, and psychological predictors of ethical sensitivity and the psychometric qualifications of a new measure of ethical sensitivity, entitled the Quick-Racial and Ethical Sensitivity Test (Quick-REST). For this study, established measures of diversity, discrimination and ethnic identity were administered concurrently with the Quick-Rest. Scales of discrimination, professional beliefs and ethnic identity, which measure participants’ attitudes towards multiculturalism and equality issues, were significantly correlated with the Quick-Rest measure. Preliminary data from the Quick-Rest have also shown gender and educational training to be significant predictors of ethical sensitivity of school professionals. The results show that the Quick-REST is a short, reliable, and valid instrument to be used with school professionals. Title: Moral Development and Conceptions of Good Teaching Among Undergraduates Author(s): Jason M. Stephens, University of Connecticut GNA Garcia, University of Connecticut Abstract: The present study investigated the relations between undergraduates’ (N=118) moral judgment, moral identity, and conceptions of good teaching. All participants were 6/19/17 Page 103 of 134 college juniors in their first year of a three-year teacher education program. During their first class meeting in the program, participants were given 10 minutes to respond in writing to the following prompt: “A good teacher….” Over the course of the next three weeks, participants completed the Defining Issues Test (DIT-2) and Sense of Self Survey. Data analyses explored the extent to which participants’ descriptions of a “good” teacher relate to their moral schema judgment and sense of self. Title: Standardization of the Korean Version of DIT Author(s): Yong-Lin Moon, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Co-Author(s): Minkang Kim, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Hyunjoo Won, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Jihye Lee, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Abstract: This paper reports on the standardization of the Korean version of DIT. The analysis of standardization data will examine the developmental transition from elementary school students to collegiate students. The revision of the Korean version of DIT includes new test instructions, dilemmas, and items that have been reworded from the original test (Moon, 1986) to make them easier to understand for elementary school children. Normative data on the Korean version of DIT were obtained on 2,080 participants from elementary school students to young adults. Analysis of standardization data is expected to reveal systematic improvement in P-score with increasing age. Session 74 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 901 Papers #8 Title: Socialization into Moral Reasoning in a Torah School Classroom Author(s): Netta Avineri, University of California, Los Angeles Abstract: This project investigates moral reasoning practices within a seventh grade Reform Torah School classroom, focusing on discussions about Torah stories and discussions about classroom rules. In Torah story discussions, the teacher invites student participation through elicitations of “second stories” and the use of “designedly incomplete utterances.” The analysis of classroom rules discussions looks at question/answer sequences, formulations, and argument strategies employed by classroom participants. This study provides evidence for the central role of moral reasoning and argument within this community of practice and demonstrates how pre-adolescents play a significant part in their own socialization into the use of these practices. Title: Acculturation Effects: Moral Learning in a Multicultural Society Author(s): Catherine Ann Cameron, University of British Columbia, Canada Cindy Lau, University of British Columbia, Canada 6/19/17 Page 104 of 134 Kang Lee, University of Toronto, Canada Jennifer O’Leary, University of British Columbia, Canada Trudi S.F. Chan, University of British Columbia, Canada Genyue Fu, School of Education, Zhejiang Normal University, China Abstract: Cultural experiences influence children’s moral classifications, evaluations, and judgments of veracity, especially when they collide with such other values as modesty. We examined immigrant Chinese-Canadian children’s evaluations and judgments of selfeffacing and self-promoting lying and truth telling compared with those of Mainland Chinese and Euro-Canadian children. Chinese-Canadian children evaluated and justified lying in pro-social situations less positively than did Mainland Chinese children, but less negatively than did Euro-Canadian children, demonstrating an acculturation effect. Knowledge of these findings can contribute to curriculum development that promotes multicultural understanding and could facilitate the adjustment of children and their families in new contexts. Title: Japanese Moral Theme Comprehension: Report on an Exploratory Study Author(s): Robin Sakamoto, St. Paul’s University, Japan Abstract: The 2005 gift-of-time dissertation research grant from AME was used to conduct an exploratory study of Japanese moral theme comprehension in rural northern Japan. Results of the study show that 5th grade elementary school students can identify the moral theme of stories found in the Ministry of Education’s mandatory textbooks at rates close to that of university students. Furthermore, 3rd grade students can also perform moral theme comprehension tasks at rates of 80% when having been taught the story in class. Lessons to be learned from the moral education curriculum in Japan will be presented for educators in other countries. Session 75 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 903 Papers # 21 Title: Moral References During Storytelling: Preservice Teachers’ Communication to Young Children Author(s): Charlotte Horton, The University of Alabama Co-author(s): Steven Thoma, The University of Alabama Maria Hernandez-Reif, The University of Alabama Abstract: There remains little research on the nature of adult language directed to children within the classroom environment (Hart & Risley, 1995; Harvard Educational Review, 2004; NICHD, 1999; 2002a; 2002b; 2003). Specifically, when given the opportunity to explain to children why a behavioral decision may be appropriate or inappropriate, will teachers respond to this opportunity and if so, what do they say? The goals of the present study were twofold: (1) to gather and examine preliminary data on the content of adult 6/19/17 Page 105 of 134 storytelling language directed to a preschool child; (2) and to develop an adult language scale sensitive to the type(s) of moral referencing made during the storytelling. Low levels of moral referencing were found in both genders. However, significant main effects were found for males. Data also demonstrate significant effects for imposed role and time conditions in the study, as well as the levels of moral referencing. Title: Fostering Social, Emotional, and Moral Understanding During The Preschool Years Author(s): Angela M. Jaramillo, University of British Columbia, Canada Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl, University of British Columbia, Canada Abstract: Understanding the factors that young children need to be successful in school and in life has long been an important objective for researchers, parents, and early childhood educators interested in the promotion of competence and the prevention of educational and psychological maladjustment. This presentation will provide recent research findings on an evaluation of a social emotional competence and anti-bullying program for preschool-aged children, with a focus on the social, emotional, and moral developmental outcomes. A discussion of both theoretical and practical implications for the promotion of young children’s social and moral competence will be put forth. Title: Listening to the Heart: Fostering Moral Discernment in Elementary Schools Author(s): Daniel Vokey, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Canada Jeannie Kerr, Admiral Seymour Elementary School, Vancouver, Canada Abstract: This presentation will begin with a brief theoretical introduction to moral discernment as a form of ethical response attentive to reasons of heart and mind. It will argue for the importance of moral discernment in terms of the indispensable role of judgment in ethical decision-making. It will illustrate education for moral discernment in elementary schools with examples drawn from one teacher's exemplary practices. These practices include activities that encourage growth in children's ability to discern the features of moral situations through greater self-awareness of the felt quality of their experiences. Session 76 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 904 Papers #39 Title: Teaching Professional Ethics in a Pluralist Society: Proceeding without Agreement Author(s): Matthew W. Keefer, University of Missouri, St Louis Abstract: This paper will examine the challenge of implementing professional ethics training, while serious disagreement exists in foundational issues and principles. Practical doubts are often raised whether ethics training is even possible while serious disagreement exists among participants regarding both substantive moral beliefs and their justification. This 6/19/17 Page 106 of 134 paper will challenge this assumption using both theoretical and practical arguments. It will be concluded that there are four “potential sources of agreement” that include: the practical or “specific” problems in the domain; the intermediate level principles for the justification for moral actions; descriptions of the performances or competencies that characterize mature ethical reasoning, and finally, the principles guiding the design and methods of professional ethics education. Title: Promoting the Ethical Development of Undergraduate Business Students Author(s): First Author: Christopher D. Schmidt, The College of William and Mary Co-author(s): Charles R. McAdams, III, School of Education, The College of William and Mary Christopher P. Adkins, The College of William and Mary Abstract: In response to a multitude of high profile business scandals in the past 15 years, the current business education literature has called for more effective ethics preparation in undergraduate business education. Kohlberg's moral development scheme has frequently been cited as a framework for conceptualizing the ethics problem in business; however, no research has previously evaluated the effectiveness of a classroom-based, cognitive developmental intervention on the moral/ethical reasoning of undergraduate business students. This presentation will review the design, implementation, and positive results of one such intervention, Deliberate Psychological Education(DPE), that was integrated into an existing undergraduate business ethics course. Title: On the Role of Authority in Adult-Child Sex Author(s): First Author: Jan Steutel, Vrije University, The Netherlands Second author: Ben Spiecker, Vrije University, The Netherlands Abstract: Recently the deontological argument (of David Finkelhor and many others) that adultchild sex is morally wrong because the child cannot meet the conditions of valid consent is strongly challenged by several authors. Their counter-argument is that if adult-child sex is wrong because the child cannot validly consent, many other adult-child interactions should be deemed wrong on the very same basis, whereas in fact we consider those interactions morally legitimate. It will be argued that this counter-argument is valid only if the adult involved has some form of legitimate authority over the child, and, correspondingly, that the deontological argument is perfectly sound if the adult involved lacks such a form of legitimate authority. It will be concluded that cultivating the proper attitude towards the distribution of authority in adult-child relationships should be considered a central aim of civic education. Session 77 6/19/17 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 804/805 Page 107 of 134 Symposium #51 Title: Character, Moral, and Citizenship Education in a Democratic Society Chair (s): Victor Battistich, University of Missouri, St. Louis Abstract: This symposium explores the intersection of character, moral, and citizenship education in a democratic society. In the first paper, Althof and Berkowitz discuss the socializing function of schools, providing an analysis of character, moral, and citizenship education and the relationships between moral character and democratic citizenship. The second paper, by Bredemeier and Shields, examines sports as a means of developing moral character, arguing that this is most likely to occur when sports teams have the characteristics of democratic communities. Finally, Schmidt and Bier describe a youth empowerment intervention in which students identify social problems in their local communities and undertake collective action towards their solution. Title: Where Character Meets Citizenship Author(s): Wolfgang Althof, University of Missouri, St. Louis Marvin W. Berkowitz, University of Missouri, St. Louis Abstract: In democratic societies, much attention has been paid to the role of schools in the socialization of future citizens. In Europe, this endeavor tends to center on terms such as democratic education, and education for democratic citizenship. In the United States, the focus is either on moral formation (character education) or on civic/citizenship education. In Asia, concepts of moral and civic education are closely related with a focus on morality. We will give an introduction to character and moral education, discuss some historical and recent approaches that link moral character to good citizenship, and explore the potential of integrating elements from both domains in educating democratic and responsible citizens. Title: Moral and Performance Character: Building Character and Citizenship Through Sports Author(s): Brenda Light Bredemeier, University of Missouri, St. Louis David Light Shields, University of Missouri, St. Louis Abstract: This paper examines specific features of sport teams that are most likely to facilitate growth in character. Two dimensions of character are distinguished, moral character and performance character, which each have both personal and civic (or citizenship) aspects. It is argued that sport teams must have the characteristics of democratic communities (shared community norms around common values and collective responsibility) if they are to build character and citizenship. Title: Media Education and Civic Engagement: Empowering Youth to Make Healthy Choices Author(s): 6/19/17 Page 108 of 134 Spring Schmidt, University of Missouri, St. Louis Melinda Bier, University of Missouri, St. Louis Abstract: Describing the civic engagement strand of a multidisciplinary youth empowerment model where students learn about the power of media to influence public opinion, to deconstruct media messages targeted at them, and to produce their own small media to share their positive messages about health with all levels of their community. In addition to media education, the YEA! TEAM model uses Project Citizen to teach and guide students through the process of public policy, and specifically to address the needs of their community through identifying a problem, working collaboratively on a solution, and completing an action plan for a regional showcase. Session 78 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 909 Symposium #54 Title: Approaches to Education for Democracy in Peru and Mexico Author(s): First Author: Susana Frisancho, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru Co-author(s): María Cristina Moreno, North Regional Committee for Cooperation with UNESCO Susana Patiño González, Universidad de Monterrey, Mexico Discussants: José Alberto Mesa, Colegio San José, Colombia Ann Higgins-D'Alessandro, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University Abstract: This symposium presents three visions of the topic of education for democracy in two Latin American countries. The papers analyze a proposition of curricular planning for K12 in Mexico and the evaluation of the effects of intervention of a civics education program in K-12 in Peru, and present a proposal to broaden the limits of civic duties mediated by compassion as a moral obligation, beyond their usual contexts. Title: Citizen Education and Transitional Justice: Results from a National Evaluation in Peru Author(s): Susana Frisancho, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru Abstract: Peru is living the worst moral crisis of its history, and moral and citizen education is being rediscovered as the only possible way to construct community and democracy. In a period of transitional justice after a civil war that divided the country, moral and citizen education are more important than ever. However, until very recently the country did not have an accurate idea of the way students were constructing citizen skills and concepts, since there had not been in Peru any evaluation of this educational area. For this reason, the section of the Ministry of Education in charge of evaluating the quality of education (UMC in Spanish, Unidad de Medición de la Calidad) carried on the 4th national evaluation of learning. In that year, in addition to the traditional areas of 6/19/17 Page 109 of 134 language and math, citizen education was evaluated for the first time both in elementary school and high school, in a nationwide basis. This paper presents the logic of this national evaluation of citizenship as well as the main results found in the process. The paper discusses the implication that the results have for the construction of democracy in Peru. Title: Civic and Ethics Education at the Elementary Level in Mexico: Challenges and Responses Author(s): María Cristina Moreno G., North Regional Committee for Cooperation with UNESCO Abstract: In spring 2006 The Mexican Ministry of Education issued a new program for civics and ethics education on the elementary level (grades 1 to 6). This program pretends to “guarantee that all children and youngsters acquire the basic knowledge; develop intellectual skills, values, and attitudes necessary to lead a fulfilling personal and family life, to practice a competent and committed citizenship, and to participate in productive life and life-long learning”.In 1999 the Mexican Ministry of Education (SEP) reintroduced the teaching of civics and ethics into the secondary school curriculum. Civics education since the 1920s had stressed issues related with the organization of the Mexican State, the creation and observation of the constitution, and the creation of a national identity. The 1999 curriculum stressed educating for democracy, the relationship between civic and ethical values, and particular issues related to moral education particularly important during the years of adolescence. The secondary school curriculum met with resistance from families and conservative groups, particularly in issues related to sexual education and the presentation of alternative models of families. This paper discusses the sources of resistance from both parents and teachers, as well as the negotiations and adjustments made to the secondary school curriculum. Based on the experience of the introduction of civics and ethics instruction into the secondary school curriculum, recommendations are made for the introduction of civics and ethics instruction into the elementary school curriculum. Title: Compassion as a Moral Duty Author(s): Susana Patiño González, Universidad de Monterrey, Mexico Abstract: It is quite common in Mexico to observe how people can feel and show moral obligation toward their closed ones but not for those who are not in the proximity of immediate relations. To make justice in a country with high figures on poverty we require to enhance our perception about the other and our sense of obligation to those in need. For democracy to succeed, we have to promote compassion as a moral duty. The theoretical ground is Levinas’ thought attuned with Kant’s argument of compassion as an indirect duty. Some ideas for cultivating compassion in educational settings are presented too. Session 79 6/19/17 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 803 Page 110 of 134 Symposium # 69 Title: Mixed Method and Longitudinal Approaches to Understanding StudentTeacher Relationships, Classroom Climate, and School Climate as Interrelated Contexts of Children’s Development Discussant: Robert Selman, Harvard Graduate School of Education Author(s): Erin O’Connor, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Luba Falk Feigenberg, Children’s Hospital Boston Maria D. LaRusso, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Co-author(s): Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This symposium will present three studies using mixed method and/or longitudinal approaches to examine student-teacher relationships, classroom climate, and school climate as contexts for children's social development. The first paper will describe the influence of classroom climate on student-teacher relationships from first through fifth grade. The second paper will illustrate how middle school students’ behavior is influenced by their perceptions of school climate, particularly the consistency and fairness of rules. The last paper will explore the effect of teacher-student relationships and school relational climate on children’s social and moral development, including qualitative analyses of variation in support for socio-moral behavior across elementary school settings. Title: Quality of Student-Teacher Relationships Throughout Elementary School: Contextual Predictors Author(s): Erin O’Connor, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: The current study examines associations between aspects of the classroom and school environment and the quality of student-teacher relationships from first through fifth grade. Findings indicate that classroom environment influences the quality of studentteacher relationships. Furthermore, results demonstrate that the effects of classroom environment vary as a function of child race/ethnicity and neighborhood characteristics. For example, the association between a positive classroom emotional climate and a high quality student-teacher relationship was greater for African-American than EuropeanAmerican children. Results may inform classroom practices to support the development of high quality student-teacher relationships. 6/19/17 Page 111 of 134 Title: Context Matters: A Mixed-Methods Study on the Influence of School Climate on Students’ Behavior and Social Development in Early Adolescence Author(s): Luba Falk Feigenberg, Children’s Hospital Boston Abstract: In this presentation, I share findings from a mixed methods study that demonstrate the influence of students’ perceptions of school climate on their behavior. Findings suggest that the social context of the school influences students’ behavior, regardless of their social maturity. In addition, results indicate that the effect of a positive school climate on behavior is moderated by students’ level of social awareness. Qualitative data analyses highlight the importance of how teachers implement rules as particularly critical to students’ experiences of school as a positive environment. This study may provide insight to interventions that strengthen schools’ capacity to promote the healthy social development of all students. Title: Mixed Method Analyses of Schools as Contexts for Social and Moral Development in Middle Childhood Author(s): Maria D. LaRusso, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Co-Author(s): Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: This paper presents a mixed methods study of the inter-related influences of teacherstudent relationships and the school relational climate on children’s development. Results indicate that children’s social-emotional competence and socio-moral behaviors are predicted by more positive perceptions of the school relational climate, and greater closeness and less conflict in relationships with teachers. However, in highly conflictual relationships with classroom teachers, students tend to engage in a high level of problem behaviors regardless of the larger climate. Qualitative analyses illustrate how children receive different messages and levels of support for socio-moral behavior across different teachers and settings within elementary schools. Session 80 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Symposium # 65 Title: The Role of Purpose in Moral Functioning Author(s): First Author: Kendall Cotton Bronk, Stanford University Co-author(s): 6/19/17 Room: 912 Page 112 of 134 Daniel Lapsley, University of Notre Dame Seana Moran, Stanford University Abstract: Our symposium features three studies of moral purpose. Each focuses, in a different way, on the positive role purpose plays in adolescents and young adult development. The first presentation explores the role of humility among a sample of intensely purposeful youth. In this study the author finds that humility plays a mediating role between purpose and positive youth development. The second study includes findings from a longitudinal study designed to assess the impact of undergraduate service learning experiences on the development of a moral sense in adulthood. Specifically the study looks at the relationship between purpose and generativity. Finally, the last presentation explores the relationship between creativity and morality through a study of commitment. Title: Humility among Purposeful Adolescents Author(s): Kendall Cotton Bronk, Stanford University Abstract: Humility is not a moral characteristic typically associated with adolescents, especially not adolescents who have received a good deal of attention and publicity for their achievements. However, when the authors and members of the research team analyzed interview data from case studies conducted with a sample of intensely purposeful adolescents, a strikingly high and consistent level of humility emerged. Based on the findings, humility appears to play a mediating role in the relationship between moral purpose and positive youth development; implications for this preliminary conclusion will be addressed. Title: Purpose and Well-Being in Adulthood Author(s): Daniel K. Lapsley, University of Notre Dame Jay Brandenberger, University of Notre Dame Anthony Burrow, University of Notre Dame Jessica Collado, University of Notre Dame Patrick Hill, University of Notre Dame Abstract: We report evidence on the measurement properties and convergent validity of the Stanford Center of Adolescence Youth Purpose Scale. We also examine whether the linkage between purpose and well-being is mediated by agentic, self-efficacy beliefs. In a sample of 284 adults (Mage = 35 yrs; 168 males), results support a reliable two-factor (Purpose, Searching) scale that is differentially correlated with well-being and life satisfaction. The relationship between Purpose and life satisfaction was mediated by agency and pathways related to goals (“hope”). Life satisfaction seems to require a sense of purpose but also hope in one’s ability to enact intended outcomes. Title: The Moral Commitments of Creators Author(s): Seana Moran, Stanford University 6/19/17 Page 113 of 134 Abstract: Creativity is a novel yet appropriate contribution to a work domain such as literature. Creative people are often portrayed as amoral or even immoral troublemakers because they do not adhere to, and sometimes upset, accepted social or cultural norms. My study of how commitment functions among writers suggests this portrayal may not be accurate. The most creative writers, those who transform readers and other writers use of literature, invest in a passion to change minds toward what they believe is a more moral perspective. They infuse their writing with a moral purpose to right perceived wrongs or highlight perceived rights. Session 81 3:30 pm–4:45 pm Room: 914 Symposium #71 Title: Effectiveness of the “Roots of Empathy” Program on Children’s SocialEmotional Competence: Considering Theory, Context, and Cumulative Effects Chair(s): Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Canada Veronica Smith, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Discussant: Darcia Narváez, Center for Ethical Education (CEE), University of Notre Dame Author(s): Bryan W. Sokol, St. Louis University Clyde Hertzman, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Canada Denise Buote, Arbor Educational and Clinical Consulting Inc. Stuart Hammond, Simon Fraser University, Canada Theo Elfers, Simon Fraser University, Canada Snjezana Huerta-Kralj, Simon Fraser University, Canada Angela M. Jaramillo, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Canada Michaela Jelen, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Janine Odishaw, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Abstract: The “Roots of Empathy” (ROE) is a school-based social emotional competence promotion program that was developed from both theoretical and empirical literature on the antecedents and determinants of prosocial characteristics and behavior in children. The three papers in this symposium reflect multiple perspectives, and include (1) a theoretical discussion of the mechanisms and processes that underlie the promotion of empathy in young children, (2) research documenting the moderating role of classroom context and instructor effectiveness on ROE program outcomes for elementary school children, and (3) a presentation of research findings explicating the long-term cumulative effects of the ROE program on children’ social, emotional, and moral development. Title: Empathy, Agency, and the “Rules” of Inter-Personal Engagement Author(s): Stuart Hammond, Simon Fraser University, Canada 6/19/17 Page 114 of 134 Theo Elfers, Simon Fraser University, Canada Snjezana Huerta-Kralj, Simon Fraser University, Canada Bryan W. Sokol, St. Louis University Abstract: We present a relational account of empathy. This approach, based on the theories of Youniss (1980) and Piaget (1932), avoids many of the pitfalls of classical and neuroscientific accounts. Although neither theorist dealt directly with empathy, their work on symmetrical (peer-to-peer) and asymmetrical (parent-to-child) interpersonal relations, points to the kinds of interpersonal dynamics that are likely to lead to concern for others. In our current research, we hypothesize that asymmetrical relational structures in peer contexts promote other-oriented concern. We use the Roots of Empathy program to illustrate asymmetrical relations and how they may be used to facilitate prosocial development. Title: What You See is What You Get: Considering Context and Process in an Evaluation of a Social Emotional Learning Program Author(s): Veronica Smith, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Michaela Jelen, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Janine Odishaw, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Abstract: In the current study, we add to the array of theoretically-based evaluations of social competence programs by examining the effect of the “Roots of Empathy”(ROE), a school based universal preventive intervention that focuses the development of children’s emotional and social understanding. We extend that research by examining the variability of program implementation across a number of dimensions, systematically observing instructor delivery of the program and teacher extension activities through in class observation and teacher and instructor questionnaires. Results will be discussed in order to reflect an understanding of the program effect and the moderating influences of classroom context and implementation integrity in relation to program outcomes. Title: Long-Term Impact of "Roots of Empathy" on Social Competence with School-Aged Children: Theoretical, Developmental and Contextual Considerations Author(s): Kimberly A. Schonert-Reichl, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Canada Veronica Smith, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Denise Buote, Arbor Educational and Clinical Consulting Inc. Angela M. Jaramillo, Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Canada Clyde Hertzman, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Canada Abstract: The present study is a first attempt to examine longitudinally the effects of the “Roots of Empathy” program. Specifically, the primary purpose of this study was to extend the existing evaluation research (Schonert-Reichl et al., 2002; Schonert-Reichl, ZaidmanZait, & Hertzman, 2002) on the efficacy of the ROE program by conducting a short-term longitudinal investigation of those children who participated in the 2003-2004 ROE 6/19/17 Page 115 of 134 Randomized Controlled Trial evaluation study. Participants included children in the 3rd to 7th grades (N = 527) drawn from 19 schools in a large public school district in Western Canada. Hierarchical Linear Modeling was used to analyze data across the four years of assessments. Theoretical issues linking social-emotional understanding to social behaviors and implications for the development of school-based interventions are discussed. Session 82 3:30 pm – 4:45 pm Room: 908 Papers #34 Title: The Meaning of Equality to South African Learners: The Case of Reasoma Secondary Author(s): Rhashida Hilliard, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: What is equality? According to the American Heritage Dictionary (2001), equality involves “having the same rights, privileges, or status.” With respect to the South African Equality Clause in education, Wilmot James has stated that “everyone (emphasis is mine) is equal before the law” and may not be unfairly discriminated against on the basis of “race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status, ethnic or social origin, colour, sexual orientation, age, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture, language and birth.” The clause also states that all children must obtain equal education, and the state must strive to provide equal access to resources whether students reside in a township, suburban, or urban environment. Under apartheid, egalitarian democracy reigned supreme for whites, yet blacks, including Africans, Indians, and Coloureds, were excluded from this. Now, as South Africa moves forward with rebuilding its nation, which includes but is not limited to revamping the educational system, the country must deal with addressing past disparities while preparing for a more equitable tomorrow. In light of the abovementioned challenges that South Africa must face in order to rectify past injustices, this paper seeks to examine what equality means in the current South African context. How is equality achieved? How is it defined? Does it vary by race, gender, ethnicity, etc.? Title: Teaching for Mature Interdependence Author(s): Jeremy Leeds, Center for Community Values and Action, Horace Mann School Abstract: Schools are by their nature social institutions; teaching and learning are relational processes. So why is independence valued so highly, while the social and relational contexts, so important both in school and for later life, are often ignored? This paper will address why learning to be interdependent is a crucial goal in education; why it has been devalued; and what schools should do to value and teach about developing the qualities and values of interdependence. The paper will explore and advocate for the concept of mature interdependence (Nussbaum, 2001; Leeds, 2005) as a goal for all levels of education. 6/19/17 Page 116 of 134 Title: Discourse of Human Dignity – Analysis of Swedish Prospective Teachers’ Positions Author(s): Anna Tapola, School of Pure and Applied Natural Sciences, University of Kalmar, Sweden; Swedish National Graduate School in Science and Technology Education Research, Linköping University, Sweden Abstract: Democracy and human dignity are supposed to form the basis of the Swedish school system. However, what dignity means is far from clear. Instead, the literature on dignity seems to be full of controversies and alternative distinctions. Consequently, if these fundamental values are seen as social constructions, the meaning must be investigated and clarified. This study aims to analyze teacher-students’ meaning making of human dignity in relation to three different stages: life of the unborn, life between birth and death, and human dignity after death. Findings show a variety of standpoints, which indicate educational consequences in moral and democratic education. AME Town Hall Business Meeting With Refreshments Location: Kimmel Center, Rooms 905 and 907, 4:45 pm - 5:15 pm John Snarey, President’s Report Garrett Duncan, Treasurer’s Report Nancy Nordmann, Secretary’s Report Elly Vozzola, Publications’ Report Poster Sessions Eisner and Lubin Auditorium, 4th Floor 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Poster# 201 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Demographic and Classroom Predictors of the Quality of Teacher-Student Relationships First author: Caitlin E. Cline, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University Co-author(s): 6/19/17 Page 117 of 134 Stephanie M. Jones, Graduate School of Education, Fordham University Joshua L. Brown, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University J. Lawrence Aber, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: Extending the work of Saft & Pianta (2001), this study assessed the extent to which demographic characteristics of teachers and students affect teacher-student relationships and emotional characteristics of teachers in a diverse sample of 942 third grade students and 85 teachers from New York City public schools. Child ethnicity, gender, and age; teacher ethnicity, gender, number of years teaching, and levels of burnout and emotion ability; and ethnic match between teacher and child were related to relationships. Relational tendencies of three major ethnic groups (White, Hispanic, Black, and “Other”) were compared by assessing matched and mismatched teacher-student pairs. Poster# 202 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Mo Tsu and Cosmopolitanism Author(s): Fumiyuki Ohnishi, Tokyo Future University, Japan Abstract: Mo Tsu was the founder of Mo Jia (Moism) and lived in the Shan Dong province of China. The central idea of Moism is to "love everyone as you love yourself." Mo Tsu believed that if everyone could do that, the world would be at peace. Followers of Moism are strict self-rulers and are opposed to the ideas of Confucianism which dominated at that time Poster# 203 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: The Five Dynamics: an Assumption of Morality in Eastern Thought Author(s): Hyun Chang Lee, University of Missouri Stephen Sherblom, University of Missouri Abstract: The Five Dynamics model is an age-old conception developed in Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism meant to illustrate important dynamics involved in human life. The model assists in understanding the development of moral character, identifying moral problems, balancing and harmonizing dynamics within the individual and between the individual and society. We are bringing the insights of this model into relation with moral psychology to complement western conceptions of moral development. We address alternative understandings of the dynamics in this model, and the model as a whole, and review the difficulties of translating these metaphorical terms into usable psychosocial concepts. 6/19/17 Page 118 of 134 Poster# 204 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: The Psychological Well-Being of “Seeking” and “Achieving” Purpose in Adulthood Lead Author: Patrick L. Hill, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Jessica Collado, University of Notre Dame Anthony Burrow, University of Notre Dame Jay Brandenberger, University of Notre Dame Daniel K. Lapsley, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Seeking one’s purpose is a paramount developmental concern for most individuals, and failure to achieve purpose may be linked to negative psychological wellbeing. The current research compared individuals who had identified their purpose with those still searching for one, on whether they could be classified as following different patterns of adult development. Our research indicates that purpose seekers did also follow a “seeker” pattern of development, and that those adults who had identified their purpose followed an “achiever” pattern of development. We suggest the possibility of alternative pathways in constructing purposive lives in adulthood. Poster# 205 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Mechanisms of Moral Disengagement and Increased Levels of Aggression in a College Population Author(s): Jessica Ashley Carroll, The University of Alabama Abstract: The primary purpose of this study is to connect Bandura’s model of moral disengagement to physical aggression in a college-aged population. Research has shown that individuals in fraternities are more frequently involved in acts of physical and sexual aggression than their non-member student counterparts (Spaulding & Eddy, 1995; Flezzani & Benshoff, 2003; Cokley et al., 2001). In Bandura’s (1996) landmark study on early adolescent males, he linked aggression to moral disengagement. This study links acts of aggression to moral disengagement using Bandura’s theoretical framework and instrument to measure moral disengagement. Results and analysis demonstrated that male fraternity members scored significantly higher on tests of moral disengagement and physical aggression than non-members. Poster# 206 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Educators’ and Students’ Thoughts on Moral Reasoning, Wisdom and Character Author(s): Ana Carvajal, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada Michel Ferrari, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada Abstract: 6/19/17 Page 119 of 134 We discuss the growing character education movement in North America, and present a study of a district-wide effort to foster character development in public schools in North Toronto. Through interviews with principals, teachers, and students at two ‘best practice schools’—one elementary and one high school—our study explores participants’ opinions about the program, Character Matters!, in particular, their understanding of character, moral reasoning, and their own accounts of moments in their lives when they believe they acted wisely. Preliminary results show that even the youngest students easily identify such moments, but in ways that reflect Kohlberg’s stages of moral development. Poster# 207 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: An Analysis of Elementary School Students’ Comprehension of the Korean Version of DIT Author(s): Hee-Sun Chang, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Abstract: This study analyzed elementary school students’ comprehension levels of Defining Issues Test (DIT) to figure out if the test can be also taken by elementary school level students in Korea. This study data was collected from elementary school students from the first grade to the sixth grade in Korea. The comprehension of DIT by elementary students was broken down into two categories: dilemma comprehension and test procedure comprehension. Chi-Squared test and t-test were conducted for this study. As a result, the grade was found to relate with the level of dilemma comprehension and test procedure comprehension. The results confirm that most first grade students did not understand the dilemma and the test procedure. In addition, the students with higher dilemma comprehension understood the moral judgment test procedure better. Poster# 208 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Children’s Social Cognition, Moral Emotion Attribution, and Prosocial Behavior Author(s): Theo Elfers, Simon Fraser University, Canada Snjezana Huerta-Kralj, Simon Fraser University, Canada Stuart Hammond, Simon Fraser University, Canada Stephanie McKenzie, Simon Fraser University, Canada Jayne Sidall, Simon Fraser University, Canada Bryan Sokol, St. Louis University Abstract: This study examines the relations between children’s interpretive social understanding, their attributions of moral emotions, and their prosocial behavior. We hypothesized that children who had achieved an interpretive theory-of-mind and who were able to attribute mixed emotions to moral transgressors would be more likely to exhibit prosocial sharing behavior. Participants were five- to eight-year-old children who completed an interpretive task, two moral emotion attribution tasks, and a sticker-sharing task. Preliminary data 6/19/17 Page 120 of 134 support our hypothesis. Implications of these findings for future research and moral educational practice are discussed. Poster# 209 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Examining Differences Between School Counselors’ & School Counseling Interns’ Moral Development First Author(s): Dana Griffin, College of William and Mary Second Author(s): Victoria Foster, College of William and Mary Abstract: Professional school counselors are charged with developing and maintaining nurturing environments that are suitable for all children. Suicide, substance abuse, physical and sexual abuse, homelessness, and other crises are commonplace in today’s schools. Furthermore, schools are becoming more diverse, but counselors may not be equipped to effectively work with the population. Yet, we place the task of supervising school counseling interns with professional school counselors, which may lead to miseducative experiences in supervision. This presentation discusses the findings of a dissertation assessing professional school counselors’ and school counseling interns’ levels of moral development as it relates to training and supervision. Poster# 210 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: An Empirical Study of Psychological Influences in Unger’s Moral Philosophy First Author(s): Natalie Homa, University of St. Thomas Second Author(s): Jason Cowell, University of Minnesota Heidi Giebel, University of St. Thomas Tonia Bock, University of St. Thomas Abstract: The purpose of this study was to empirically test psychology-related hypotheses proposed by ethics philosopher, Peter Unger, in Living High and Letting Die. According to Unger, people’s moral intuitions are often affected by contrary psychological factors when responding to situations involving diminishing loss or suffering of innocent others. He proposed that using a hypothetical case involving several active options would help people to overcome psychological influences. We tested Unger’s hypotheses using four of his cases. Two groups of undergraduate Philosophy students were used: one who had not taken an Ethics course and one who had. Findings were significant, however, in the opposite direction of Unger’s hypotheses and our expectations. Poster# 211 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Evaluation of the “Uncle Dan’s Report Card” Moral Education Program Author(s): 6/19/17 Page 121 of 134 Jesse Graham, University of Virginia Abstract: The Uncle Dan’s Report Card Program is a moral education program centered around a home report card that parents and children fill out together, including habits of kindness, managing screen time, expressing gratitude, and other positive moral behaviors. It emphasizes activities and relationships between students, parents and teachers. The program was piloted in six schools in three school districts (one high-SES suburban, one low-SES urban, one low-SES rural), which were matched with six control schools in the same districts. Children in the pilot schools showed significantly greater improvements (relative to controls) in nine of the 12 target behaviors. Poster# 212 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Measuring Classroom Connectedness: Classrooms as Contexts for Children’s Socio-Moral Development Author: Snjezana Huerta-Kralj, Simon Fraser University, Canada Abstract: Peer groups are important relational contexts for children’s socio-moral development. The significance of peer relationships is evidenced by the increased focus on measuring peer context and its relationships to children’s socio-moral development. The present measurement strategy represents a holistic approach to investigating these interpersonal contexts, both theoretically and in terms of scoring, to compliment the existing measurement techniques, which include peer relations, peer nominations, and peer networks. It is argued that classroom-level relational dynamics are more than aggregates or averages of individuals’ peer status or dyadic relations. Rather, they are group-level processes that are not reducible to their component parts. Poster# 214 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Effects of Family and Peer Support on Social Skills among Adolescents Author(s): Junko Enomoto, Toyo University, Japan Yayoi Watanabe, Hosei University, Japan Abstract: This study examined the effects of family and peer support on improving and maintaining adolescents’ social skills. The subjects were 584 junior high and 221 high school students who completed questionnaires designed to assess perceived social skills and family and peer support. The analysis of Social Skills extracted two factors: the “prosocial” factor and the “anti-social” factor. Two-way analysis of variance and multiple linear regression analysis were utilized. These results suggest that 1) both pro- and antisocial skills develop with age and 2) peer support plays a very important role in improving and maintaining adolescents’ pro-social skill. 6/19/17 Page 122 of 134 Poster# 216 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: A Sociocognitive Approach: Moral and Social Prototype Relationships Author(s): Nicholas Lynchard, University of Notre Dame Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: The relationship between implicit associations of moral concepts and social attributes were obtained through the use of a social-implicit associations test (IAT). Continuous data from the social IAT were significantly correlated with an explicit measure of moral identity as well as self-esteem. Also, the social IAT proved a better indicator of explicit moral identity than previous implicit measures purporting to examine the same phenomena. Results from this experiment not only confirm the implicit – explicit interactive relationship of moral identity, but also suggest a strong, implicit social component to the moral domain. Poster# 217 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Saving the Dying: Effects of Playing a Prosocial Video Game Author(s): Carl MacMichael, University of Notre Dame Bradley Mattan, University of Notre Dame Darcia Narváez, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Violent video games significantly increase aggressive thoughts, feelings and behavior. Prosocial video game effects were examined here in three game conditions: violent (killing bandits), helping (saving people), neutral (collecting gold), plus two control conditions. All participants completed stories which were scored for prosocial, aggressive, and neutral responses. MANOVA analyses showed a significant effect for the helping condition in increasing prosocial responses. Comparable to a hostile expectancy bias promoted by violent games, we propose a prosocial expectancy bias as a result of playing an altruistic video game. Game play, violent or altruistic, influences dispositions for action, aggressive or prosocial, respectively. Poster# 218 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Integrity, Generativity and Values: An Examination of the Integrity Scale Author(s): Lead Author: Patrick L. Hill, Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame Co-author(s): Jessica A. Jimenez, Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame Laura Nawrocki, Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame Daniel K. Lapsley, Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame Abstract The Integrity Scale purports to measure a character strength that reflects “steadfast commitment to ethical principles.” We examined its psychometric properties and 6/19/17 Page 123 of 134 predictive validity in a sample of 248 adults (Mage = 35). Results indicate a reliable single-factor measure. Integrity was a significant predictor of generativity, psychological wellbeing (personal growth, purpose in life), spirituality and community volunteering, but not satisfaction with life. We discuss the contribution of integrity to eudaimonia and the promise of the Integrity Scale for research in moral psychology. Poster# 219 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: The Role of Emotion in Moral Dilemmas: A Cross National Comparison Author(s): Eva E. A. Skoe, University of Oslo, Norway Co-author(s): Nancy Eisenberg, Arizona State University Siri Neset, University of Oslo, Norway Abstract: This study examined the relationship between emotion and moral thought in Norwegian as well as American men and women. Participants rated the difficulty and importance of one real-life and three hypothetical moral dilemmas and their feelings while making decisions about the dilemmas. Responses also were scored for their care orientation. Analyses comparing the two nations showed similarities (especially on the hypothetical dilemmas) as well as differences (especially on the real-life dilemmas). A reason for the latter may be that the Norwegians generated more relational dilemmas than the Americans. There were gender differences in both nations. Across both types of dilemmas, women scored higher than men on care reasoning and emotions. Compared to men, the moral self of women seems more tied to emotion and a care orientation. Poster# 220 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: 405/406 Title: Learning Virtues through Championship in Brazilian Public School Author(s): Maria Judith Sucupira da Costa Lins, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Co-author(s): Eliana Machado de Almeida, Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Monique Marques Longo, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Abstract: This research focuses on how it is possible to learn virtues through the sport championship in Brazilian public school. Theoretical basis was MacIntyre’s book After Virtue and Kohlberg’s stages of moral development. Virtues were justice, share, respect and common good. The objective was to improve moral values in sixteen leaders and to qualify the ethical model to younger students. Students were divided in four groups and each one had four leaders selected by their ethical behavior. The leaders meet the physical education teachers once a week in order to learn virtues. Results show that it is possible to achieve moral virtues through games. Poster# 221 6/19/17 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Page 124 of 134 Title: Effects of Moral Education on Social Skills and School Adjustment Author(s): Yayoi Watanabe, Department of Psychology, Hosei University, Japan Tomoko Kobayashi, Faculty of Education, Shizuoka University, Japan Abstract: This study examined the effects on the elementary school students of the Voices of Love and Freedom (VLF) program as a moral education aiming to promote and nurture social skills and decrease a feeling of maladjustment at school. Subjects were fifth graders who attend a public school. Students were asked to fill out three kinds of questionnaires relating to social skills, school maladjustment, and conflict resolution as a pre- and posttest. Results showed that students in the VLF program class showed an increase in social skills and positive interpretation of friends’ intentions and a decrease in the use of force. Poster# 222 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Exploring Naturalistic Conceptions of ‘A Moral Person’ for Koreans: A Pilot Study Author(s): Sunghun Kim, The University of Texas at Austin Abstract: Moral psychological research has been conducted based on scholars’ conceptions of ‘morality,’ not on ordinary people’s. Some researchers have recently been interested in how American or Canadian people conceptualize ‘morality,’ ‘a moral person,’ or ‘moral exemplars.’ The purpose of this study was to explore naturalistic conceptions of ‘a moral person’ for Koreans. Four Koreans were invited to unstructured interviews and grounded theory approach was used for analyzing. Twenty-one characters of ‘a moral person’ were identified and they were thought to be grouped into eight categories. Cultural specificities in the conceptions will be discussed, as well as suggestions and issues for the future research. Poster# 223 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Analysis of Psychological Processes Hindering or Promoting Forgiveness Author(s): Makoto Kobayashi, College of Education, Tamagawa University, Japan Abstract: The present study analyses the psychological processes hindering or promoting forgiveness in the interpersonal conflicts. A survey with ninety-five Japanese college students revealed that they found it most difficult to forgive the offender when they perceived any humiliation of their self-esteem. On the contrary, the recognition of the apology and repentance by the offender was shown as promoting the motivation for forgiveness. The religious belief in the “immanent justice” (nemesis or metaphysical retribution) turned out to facilitate the moral tolerance leading to forgiveness. Implications of these processing of forgiveness for conflict management in the interpersonal and intercultural settings were discussed. Poster# 224 6/19/17 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Page 125 of 134 Title: Facing the Intractable: Seeds of Peace Author(s): Sara M. Schleien, University of Waterloo, Canada Abstract: This research was conducted in conjunction with Seeds of Peace, an organization that strives to bring adolescents from conflict prone regions together at a summer camp in the United States. Data were collected from approximately two hundred adolescents from Israel, the West Bank, Jordan and Egypt. The current study found that bringing the adolescents from different sides of the conflict together was associated with changes to stereotype attitudes, closeness with conflict-group members, and attitudes about peace. There is evidence that the Seeds of Peace experience succeeds in bringing these young people together and allowing them to understand peaceful coexistence is possible. Poster# 225 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Changes in Moral Values of Pupils – Testing a New Methodology Author(s): Gabriela Fisarová, Faculty of Education, Masaryk University, Czech Republic Abstract: This study examines effectiveness of a specific teaching method of moral education. A partial aim is to describe the individual conception of selective values and its changing dependence on applied teaching methods. The research sample consisted of 52 pupils aged 13 – 14 years. As a research method, we have used a questionnaire measuring individual concepts of selection values, moral dilemmas observations, and interviews with pupils. Results show a significant difference in the individual moral concepts of the experimental and the control group. These results emphasize the quality of the tested teaching method. Study results underscore the importance of pedagogic activity to moral development of pupils. Poster# 226 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: A Possible Model of Analyzing Moral Judgments Author(s): Attila Horváth, Pannonia University, Veszprém, Hungary Co-author(s): Júlia Habil Szekszárdi, Pannonia University, Veszprém, Hungary Abstract We have carried out a longitudinal survey in five classes of 13-14 year old pupils. They had discussions about situations of the questionnaire during the school year. By using the same questionnaire we could also compare the results to two surveys done previously on large samples (1998: N=3316; 2004:N=1505). To illustrate the motivations of the decisions we constructed a model that places judgments in the dichotomy of freedom and determinism, and assertiveness and submission. Using the model during talks helps the development of the pupils’ moral consciousness. We are working on the development of the model to be the measuring device for moral judgment. 6/19/17 Page 126 of 134 Poster# 227 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Reasoning About Majority Rule and Personal Jurisdiction in Mainland China Author(s): Charles C. Helwig, University of Toronto, Canada Co-author(s): Shaogang Yang, Institute of Moral Education and Mental Education, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China Dingliang Tan, Normal University, China Chunqiong Liu, College of Education, Nanjing Normal University, China Tiffany Shao, University of Toronto, Canada Abstract: This study examined the reasoning of urban and rural adolescents from mainland China about individual rights and the democratic decision-making procedure of majority rule. Participants (N = 160 adolescents, 12-18 years) judged the legitimacy of majority rule and whether it was acceptable for individuals to violate a group decision for moral, social conventional, prudential, and personal issues. Majority rule was most acceptable for social conventional and prudential issues but least acceptable for personal or moral issues. Chinese adolescents judged it acceptable for individuals to violate illegitimate group decisions and appealed to personal choice and individual rights in their justifications. Poster# 228 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Moral Reasoning about the Use of Great Apes in Research Author(s): Carol Midori Okamoto, Faculty of Education, University of Alberta, Canada Abstract: For this study, I explored how different groups of individuals (including biomedical scientists, animal activists, lay adults, undergraduate students, and high school students) morally think and feel about the use of great apes in biomedical and language research. In particular, I examined how different informational statements (e.g. from psychology, biology, economics) and perceptions of great apes’ mental capacities (e.g. ability to feel pain, think logically) affect moral opinions about great apes in research. The results are discussed in terms of implications for moral education and the international environmental group called the Great Ape Project. Poster# 229 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Perceptions of the Parent-Child Relationship and Antisocial Behavior in Adulthood Author(s): Jenny Vaydich, University of Notre Dame Abstract: Adaptive emotion regulation is important for moral behavior. Research has shown numerous links between parenting, children’s ability to regulate emotions, and antisocial behaviors. Here, the relations among the parent-child relationship, emotion regulation, 6/19/17 Page 127 of 134 and antisocial behavior were assessed using structural equation modeling. Perceptions of the parent-child relationship related significantly to adult children’s reports of antisocial behaviors. Moreover, this relationship was mediated by adult children’s emotion regulation strategies. Thus, parent-child relationships that are characterized by communication, trust, and inclusion may relate to adaptive levels of emotion regulation. Also, lower levels of emotion regulation may be associated with higher levels of antisocial behaviors. Poster# 230 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Cognition and Affectivity in Moral Reasoning Author(s): Valéria Amorim Arantes, Faculty of Education, University of São Paulo, Brazil Co-author(s): Viviane Potenza Guimarães Pinheiro, Faculty of Education, University of São Paulo, Brazil Abstract: In this research our main objective was to explore the relationship between reasoning and emotion in moral conflicts. The sample was formed by 74 male and female teachers, divided into two groups of 37 professionals each. We stimulated the first group to exchange positive affective experiences and the second group to remember negative affective interactions. The subjects were then asked to resolve, individually and in writing, conflicts of moral nature. We have analyzed the subjects’ answers from the perspective of the Organizing Models of Thinking theory. The results provide evidence of dependence between reasoning and feelings. Poster# 231 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Effects of Corporal Punishment and Empathy on Moral Development Author(s): Kate Sherman, Salisbury University Lance Garmon, Salisbury University Abstract: This study attempts to replicate and expand upon Lopez, Bonenberger, and Schneider’s 2001 study comparing parental discipline, empathy, and moral reasoning. This study involves the administration of the revised Defining Issues Test (DIT-2) as well as other recently revised measures of parental punishment and participant’s level of empathy. The current measures allow for a more detailed examination of the relationship between these three broad variables. Additionally it is expected that the overall results will support Lopez et al.’s findings linking a history of physical punishment to lower levels of moral reasoning and empathy development. Poster# 232 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Priming the Pump: A Role for Service-Learning in Moral Education Author(s): Brian R. Hoyt, Ohio University 6/19/17 Page 128 of 134 Abstract: This paper is a quantitative research project designed to examine the impact servicelearning has on ethics education, as measured by the development of ethical decisionmaking abilities. The study involves a pre and posttest representing twenty-one universities with over eight hundred students involved in service-learning experiences. The study has implications for the application of best practice models in ethics education as a delivery model that primes an ethical schema. Service-Learning, an academic intervention that directs a community service experience, is a learner engagement model that previous studies posit should be examined as an intervention impacting ethics education (Loewen 1998, Cram 1998). Poster# 233 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Relationship Between Moral Identity And Religiosity Author(s): Mark Hunter, University of Alabama Abstract: The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between moral responsibility and religiosity. Subjects were examined in moral responsibility research techniques derived from cultural domain analysis. Religiosity was measured with the Religious Life Inventory. Poster# 234 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: The Basis for the Construction of Humanizing Democratic Citizenship Author(s): María Rosa Buxarrais Estrada, University of Barcelona, Spain María del Pilar Zeledón Ruíz, University of Costa Rica, Costa Rica Abstract: In this work we will assume the concept of humanizing democratic citizenship as a proposal that gathers all the main contributions derived from all those democratic and citizenship perspectives, which have contributed to a greater humanization of people. From this vantage point, humanizing democratic citizenship must be considered as the political dimension of the individual, allowing him or her to recognize his/her singularity. This is characterized by the adoption of a series of characteristics that identify individuals in their biographical context, by investing them with a series of rights from the moment they are conceived, by assuming their own obligations and bio-psycho-social development according to their age, and sociability. This last is due to the fact that individuals are willing to act within a pluralistic context, to participate critically within a community of dialogue, to share responsibility in their search for solutions to issues affecting them directly and indirectly, the capacity to build reasonable horizons to contribute to the search of justice, freedom, equality, solidarity of all those who share their own humanity. Lastly they enjoy the capacity to experience their own humanity and procure the humanization of the others. Poster# 235 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Title: Values and Moral Reasoning in Military Education Context 6/19/17 Room: Eisner/Lubin Page 129 of 134 Author(s): Wei-Lee Lu, Naval Academy, Taiwan Abstract: This proposal explores the relationship between personal values and moral reasoning in the military education context. Schwartz’s Personal Value Questionnaire (PVQ) and Rest’s Defining Issues Test (DIT) are both administered to the third class midshipmen who attended the military ethics course to investigate the relationship between personal values and moral reasoning. Preliminary survey results for the valid 45 samples that take both the PVQ and DIT show that there is a negative correlation (p<.05) between DIT pscore and the benevolence concept in the PVQ. The results of this study may suggest some important directions for the moral education in the military education context. Poster# 236 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Psychosocial Processes Moderating Moral Implementation Author(s): Verna E. Monson, Center for the Study of Ethical Development Abstract: Rest’s Four Component Model (FCM) defines psychosocial processes necessary for moral action. Moral implementation, the component least explored empirically, is misunderstood in the context of ethical decision making in business. This review integrated empirical and theoretical studies from moral psychology, business ethics, and social psychology and resulted in three implications for research and ethics education. One, moral implementation processes are antecedents of moral action and by definition involve interaction with the social environment. Two, moral implementation includes corollary processes of moral deviance and disengagement. Last, in studying moral implementation, specific methodologies that circumvent social desirability bias were identified and implications for ethics education addressed. Poster# 237 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Teaching Moral and Character Education in Elementary School through Children’s Literature Author(s): Kimberly Persiani-Becker, California State University, Los Angeles Abstract: Moral and character education in schools is receiving much attention. While this is not a new concept, it has become more and more necessary for parents and teachers to work together in order to instill the qualities affiliated with moral and character development, such as helping them grow and develop into caring, productive, and respectful members of society, which is one of the most important foundations for our children. One of the easiest ways to integrate moral and character education into everyday curriculum is through children’s literature. Children’s stories are powerful teaching and learning tools since they subtly instill character traits whether or not these traits are directly discussed or addressed in the story. However, there are many ways to make this connection more tangible through discussions about the stories followed by role playing, writing in response, and/or illustrating the implications set forth by the author. 6/19/17 Page 130 of 134 Poster# 238 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Using the Moral Theme Inventory to Evaluate a Character Education Curriculum Author(s): Peter L. Samuelson, Georgia State University Abstract: This study reports the results of the first use of the Moral Theme Inventory (MTI, Narvaez, Gleason, Mitchell, & Bentley, 1999) to evaluate the effectiveness of a film and discussion-based character education curriculum to promote growth in moral reasoning. While the standard scoring methods of the MTI did not reveal any growth in moral reasoning, a micro-analysis of the message choice portion revealed that the treatment group showed an attraction to statements that reflect higher staged reasoning than did their control counterparts. Implications for using the MTI as an evaluation tool for testing growth in moral reasoning are discussed. Poster# 239 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: How Do Korean and Japanese Students See Gilligan’s Ethic Model? First author: Shinobu Sekimizu, Tohoku Women’s College, Japan Co-author(s): Soon-Ja Choi, University of Seoul, Korea Abstract: This study examined if the sequential order of Gilligan's care development model was valid for college students in Korea and Japan, using the Moral Judgment Sorting Task (MJST), developed by Boom et al. (2001), and concerning two dilemma stories of domestic troubles: “care of parents” and “an illicit love.” As a result, there were cultural and situational effects in dealing with conflicts concerning Gilligan’s care ethic, but it could not be concluded that her model did not fit Korean students at all, because Korean and Japanese students categorized statements corresponding to level three as the highest. Poster# 240 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Measuring Ethical Sensitivities Toward Children with Disabilities: The SECQ Author(s): Marshall Strax, College of Saint Elizabeth Abstract: This session will introduce the Special Education Cases Questionnaire (SECQ) and briefly discuss results from three studies using it. The SECQ assesses subjects’ sensitivities to ethical dilemmas based on issues in the discipline of special education children, their curriculum, and their testing, classification, and placement. The SECQ contains 54 statements and uses a 5-point Likert-like rating scale. It consists of nine short dilemmas with six statements following each dilemma. The questionnaire contains a total of 15 statements from each of the three construct areas of justice, care, and critique 6/19/17 Page 131 of 134 Poster# 241 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: The Impact of a Professional Ethics Course on Professional Role Concept and Ethical Reasoning Author(s): Minkang Kim, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Abstract: This study explores the effects of a professional ethics course for second year dental students on professional role concept and on ethical reasoning. The experimental group participated in the 5-week ethics course, which uses problem-based learning approach, while the control group did not receive the ethics instruction over the period. The ethics program was implemented via discussions among students in small-group tutorial. Both groups completed Professional Role Orientation Inventory (PROI) and Defining Issue Test (DIT) prior to and post intervention period. Analysis of covariance revealed that the experimental group’s responsibility score significantly improved while their perception of controllability decreased. The program had little influence on ethical reasoning. Poster# 243 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Does Intercultural Experience Foster Moral Judgment Competence in College Students? First Author: P. David Glanzer, Eastern Mennonite University Co-author(s): Georg Lind, University of Konstanz, Germany George Nipe, Eastern Mennonite University Abstract: Intercultural educational programs could significantly enhance cognitive-moral development. Do students from a parochial college in the USA who have participated in a required international study program demonstrate higher moral judgment competence than students who have not? Is the moral judgment competence of these students related to religiosity? Participants filled out Lind's Moral Judgment Test (MJT) and answered additional questions about their international study experience and religiosity. The findings will be discussed within the background of various theories of moral development and compared to moral judgment competence findings for other college students in the USA and Europe. Poster# 246 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Children’s Perceptions of Post-Transgression Apologies Author: Craig E. Smith, Harvard Graduate School of Education Co-author(s): Paul L. Harris, Harvard Graduate School of Education Abstract: Apologies have the power to repair the interpersonal damage caused by moral transgressions. However, most of our evidence for this comes from the formal and 6/19/17 Page 132 of 134 informal study of adults. We know little about how children view and utilize apologies. The main study we present here used the “happy victimizer” paradigm to test children’s construals of victimizers’ apologies following moral transgressions. Children (ages 4-5 and 7-8) saw a victimizer either apologize or offer no account following a moral violation. Children were asked about the emotions of both the victimizers and the victims, and were asked to supply justifications for their judgments. Poster# 247 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Moral Reasoning and Moral Sensitivity of Medical Students in Korea Author(s): Jihye Lee, College of Education, Seoul National University, Korea Abstract: This longitudinal study examines the developmental trend of moral reasoning among medical students (N=141) in Korea. It also explores the effects of moral sensitivity on their development of moral reasoning. The results from the repeated measure analysis indicated that students’ moral reasoning was significantly decreased during 2 years of medical school. However, moral reasoning of the students whose moral sensitivity levels were initially low was significantly increased. This result suggests that moral sensitivity under certain levels may have an influence on the development of medical students’ moral reasoning. Further studies of moral sensitivity and reasoning may lead to the development of moral education programs for medical professions. Poster# 248 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Teaching Juveniles Normative Theories Author(s): Terje Halvorsen, Bodoe Regional University, Norway Abstract: This poster presentation deals with a study where ethics, primary normative theories, are tried mediated to juveniles through a written text. A sample of young people has red an adjusted text. Then they have expressed whether they, in their own opinion, have any advantage of reading such a text. The juveniles have given their response through answering a survey and by written comments. Poster# 249 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Teaching Ethics about the Environment: The Problem of Advocacy Author(s): Christopher Schlottmann, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University Abstract: The proper role of advocacy in ethics education is an actively discussed topic in environmental education. I will define advocacy and argue for criteria limiting its use in the teaching of environmental ethics. I argue that advocacy is permissible in the classroom within a limiting set of criteria and educational aims. They are: that advocacy should not be intellectually dishonest or unfair, and that it should not coerce or otherwise manipulate student trust or reliance upon teacher expertise and authority. The advantages 6/19/17 Page 133 of 134 of allowing advocacy include more available pedagogy and content, and the possibility of teaching skills of argumentation better. Poster# 250 5:15 pm-6:15 pm Room: Eisner/Lubin Title: Structures and Levels of Students’ Moral Judgment Competence Author(s): Nicola Mittelsten Scheid, Carl-von-Ossietzky-University of Oldenburg, Germany Co-Author(s): Corinna Hößle, Carl-von-Ossietzky-University of Oldenburg, Germany Abstract: With the development of new technologies in biology and medicine, moral judgement competence has become increasingly important. Germany`s state ministers of education have codified that students should learn this competence in secondary school. This study explores and categorises conceptual structures and developmental levels of students’ moral judgment competence. One hundred and eight interviews of fourteen and sixteen year-old students have been analysed by qualitative content analysis and, additionally, quantitative approaches. The findings indicate age and grade-dependent competence levels which provide the basis for teaching guidelines. They may serve to evaluate students’ competence and as starting points for moral interventions. Closing Reception & Cocktail Hour Entertainment by NYU Steinhardt Jazz Ensemble & SYU Steinhardt Woodwind Quintet Eisner & Lubin Auditorium, Kimmel 4th Floor 5:45 pm-6:30 pm AME Annual Banquet Entertainment by NYU Steinhardt Jazz Guitar & NYU Steinhardt Music Theatre students Rosenthal Auditorium, Kimmel 10th Floor 7:00 pm-10:30 pm 6/19/17 Page 134 of 134