A. Cognitive development
B. Affective development
C. Neurolinguistic development
D. Development of coordination
Related Mcqs:
- For Kohlberg, the development of morality primarily involves:
A. Cognitive development
B. Affective development
C. Neurolinguistic development
D. Development of coordination - Kohlberg indicates that at the most primitive level of moral development, morality is decided by ____________?
A. reward and punishment
B. individual conscience
C. social approval
D. religious values - Critics of Kohlberg’s theory of moral development have suggested that postconventional morality is more characteristic of_______than of______.
A. Democrats; Republicans
B. men; women
C. socialists; capitalists
D. African Americans; white Americans - According to Kohlberg, an individual in a stage of conventional morality would be most concerned with _____________?
A. gaining rewards
B. gaining approval
C. avoiding punishment
D. achieving fairness - Piaget is to cognitive development as Kohlberg is to ______________ development?
A. emotional
B. physical
C. moral
D. social - The nature of a nerve impulse is primarily a/an _____________ event; communication between neurons is primarily a/an_____________
A. chemical; electrical
B. acetylcholine, catecholamine
C. dendrite; axon
D. electrical; chemical - Kohlberg’s moral developmental stages are closely related to __________________?
A. Freud’s psychosexual stages
B. Erikson’s psychosexual stages
C. Piaget’s cognitive developmental stages
D. Dollard and Miller’s learning stages - A postconventional level of morality is most likely to be found in cultures that value:
A. socialism
B. communism
C. social harmony
D. individualism - According to Kohiberg, morality based on the avoidance of punishment and the attainment of concrete rewards represents a(n)______morality.
A. preconventional
B. egocentric
C. conventional
D. postconventional - A postconventional level of morality is most likely to be found in cultures that value:
A. socialism
B. communism
C. social harmony
D. individualism