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Theories of Moral Development
Children's Peer Relations
Development of Prosocial/Aggressive Behaviors
Causes of Agression
Moral Development in the Classroom
100
Theory of moral development based on the ideas presented in Piaget's The Moral Judgement of the Child.
What is Kohlberg's Theory?
100
Refers to a child of equal age or maturity
What is a peer?
100
When does prosocial behavior increase.
What is elementary years?
100
The first stage in the model of social information processing theory?
What is encoding of cues?
100
Disciplinary method serves an educational function because it gives students reasons for why certain behaviors are unacceptable.
What is inductive method of discipline?
200
People at this level approach moral issues from a hedonistic perspective.
What is preconventional moral reasoning?
200
These are more likely to initiate play, imitate, and direct positive affection toward a playmate.
What is a toddler?
200
What is the most common form of aggression in school settings?
What is bullying behavior?
200
In the model of social information processing theory, this stores memory, acquired rules, social schemes and social knowledge.
What is database?
200
Direct approach to moral development that involves teaching young people core values and virtues.
What is character education?
300
At this level, individuals have developed their own set of ethical principles to define what is morally right and wrong?
What is postconventional moral reasoning?
300
A mutually agreed upon relationship in which person responds to the other's needs and desires.
What is friendship?
300
This plays an important role in the development of prosocial behavior.
What is the home environment?
300
The three developmental courses for aggressive behavior.
What is early onset, limited duration, and late onset?
300
Teaching and learning approach that integrates academic standards with meaningful community service.
What is service learning?
400
This person challenged some of Kohlberg's ideas because they were based on men.
Who is Carol Gilligan?
400
When do important changes in peer relations occur.
What is adolescence?
400
Another form that verbal aggression can take.
What is sexual harassment?
400
Researchers have found that aggressive children tend to have this.
What is hostile attribution bias?
400
In this model, teachers and students agree on rules and share in responsibility for establishing a classroom climate that is conductive to learning.
What is the Dreikurs Model?
500
Who wrote, "The primary aim of every teacher must be to promote growth of students as competent, caring, loving, and lovable people."
What is Nel Noddings?
500
When is conformity to peer norms and expectations tend to be greater.
What is early adolescence?
500
The percent that students report that their teachers intervene in bullying situations.
What is 25?
500
This is the process by which children and adolescents encode, interpret and respond to social information?
What is social information processing theory?
500
Founded in 1993, this lists 11 core values for any character education program.
What is the Character Education Partnership?