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Yeazell, Mary I.; Johnson, Stephen F. – Teacher Education Quarterly, 1988
An examination of the relationship of faculty levels of moral reasoning to that of students at various stages of a teacher education program revealed that no group of students (including graduate level) exhibited faculty members' abilities to recognize principled moral judgments and that the student groups did not differ from each other in such…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Developmental Stages, Education Majors, Higher Education

Prentice, Joan L.; And Others – Journal of Research and Development in Education, 1989
This literature review examines the potential of selective recall for assessing level of moral reasoning. Rest's Defining Issues Test was administered to five individuals to test the applicability of certain principles of selective recall in assessing moral reasoning. (IAH)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Measures (Individuals), Moral Development
Cortese, Anthony – 1982
A sample of 245 Chicano, Black, and Anglo children, grades 2-9, from three midwestern states was chosen for a comparative study of moral judgment, to measure differences among the ethnic groups and to determine whether they made the same progression through Kohlberg's three levels of moral development. Subjects viewed video tapes of five moral…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Blacks, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
White, Barnetta McGhee – 1979
Kohlberg's (1969) slx stages of moral development are grouped into three levels of two stages each: (1) preconventional (morality is externally controlled); (2) conventional (doing the right thing and respecting authority); and (3) postconventional (principles of morality are to be applied universally). Rest (1974) typifies these stages in the…
Descriptors: Blacks, Counselor Training, Developmental Stages, Empathy
Pearson, Frances C.; Bruess, Brian J. – 2001
This study was designed to help determine whether there are gender differences in the psychological and moral development of traditional-age college students. Two hundred thirty-three first-year and graduating students were given the Student Development Task and Lifestyle Inventory (SDTLI) and the Defining Issues Test (DIT) to determine whether…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Gender Issues, Higher Education, Moral Development

Gutkin, Daniel C.; Suls, Jerry – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1979
College students were tested on Hogan's Survey of Ethical Attitudes, Rest's Defining Issues Test, Collins' revision of Rotter's Internal-External Scale, and Snyder's Self-Monitoring Scale. Subjects who endorsed personal conscience showed greater maturity in moral reasoning. The subjects who advocated social responsibility tended to show more…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, College Students, Higher Education, Locus of Control

King, Patricia M; Mayhew, Matthew J. – Journal of Moral Education, 2002
Reviews the Defining Issues Test studies (n=172) to investigate the moral development of undergraduate college students. Provides an organizational framework for analyzing educational contexts in higher education. Suggests that there are dramatic gains in moral judgment development and changes in moral reasoning during the college years. (CAJ)
Descriptors: College Environment, College Students, Educational Objectives, Ethnicity
Patterson, Alan M.; Gaynor, Alan K. – 1981
Fifty school administrators completed Rest's Defining Issues Test (DIT) and Patterson's Moral Action Choice Test (MACT) as part of a study to determine how Kohlberg's theory of moral development might apply to day-to-day administrative decision-making. The respondents were presented with hypothetical moral dilemmas and asked to explain what they…
Descriptors: Administrative Problems, Administrator Attitudes, Administrators, Elementary Secondary Education

Bakken, Linda; Romig, Charles – Journal of Adolescent Research, 1994
Examined whether a relationship exists between family adaptability and cohesion and principled moral reasoning. The moral reasoning level of 131 adolescents was measured using the Defining Issues Test, and levels of perceived family adaptability and cohesion were measured using Family and Adaptability and Cohesion Scales. No significant…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Family (Sociological Unit), Family Influence, Family Role

Self, Donnie J.; Olivarez, Margie; Baldwin, DeWitt C., Jr. – Academic Medicine, 1998
Using the Defining Issues Test, the moral reasoning of 95 Texas A&M University medical students was measured at the beginning of their first semester, after a required first-semester medical ethics course, and after their fourth year. Results show significantly increased moral reasoning at the second and third test administrations, with women…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Medical Education
Rest, James R. – 1987
Findings from research studies that use the Defining Issues Test (DIT), a test of moral judgment development, are described. These findings are relevant to three major questions in higher education research: (1) the question of student outcomes (i.e., what does college experience do for and to people?); (2) the question of the relevance and…
Descriptors: Admission Criteria, College Environment, Educational Research, Higher Education
Bunch, Wilton H. – Journal of Moral Education, 2005
Gains in moral judgement, as measured by the Defining Issues Test (DIT), correlate strongly with advancing education. Curricula that are strongly biblically based may not promote, and students with a strong fundamentalist orientation may not demonstrate, such moral growth. Students at an interdenominational, but very conservative seminary,…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Development, Moral Values, Student Attitudes

Laird, Philip G. – Journal of Moral Education, 2003
Reviews the Defining Issues Test and Spheres of Control results of students involved in the pro-choice or pro-life movements. Rates participation of student involvement in on-campus activities. Reveals abortion activists more frequently endorsed moral issues and scored higher on sociopolitical issues. Discusses results based on relationships among…
Descriptors: Activism, Critical Thinking, Higher Education, Moral Development
Rest, James; And Others – 1977
Six papers, originally presented in different form at the 1977 Convention of the Society for Research in Child Development, highlight approximately 100 studies that have used the Defining Issues Test (DIT) of moral judgment. The DIT's standardized format and objective scoring makes comparisons possible among studies, and this body of research…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Development, College Students, Correlation

Tjosvold, Dean; Johnson, David W. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1977
Thirty undergraduate students discussed a moral issue with a confederate who held either the same or the opposing opinion. Subjects in the controversy condition indicated more accurate understanding of the confederate's reasoning than their counterparts; however, noncontroversy subjects erroneously believed they understood the confederate's…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Communication (Thought Transfer), Conflict