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Care and Justice Moral Orientation Among African American College Students
Authors:Pamela L. Knox  N. S. Fagley  Paul M. Miller
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, Tennessee State University, Nashville, Tennessee;(2) GSAPP, Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey;(3) Department of Administrative and Instructional Leadership, St. John's University, Jamaica, New York
Abstract:The current study assessed the moral orientation of African American college students. In addition, we examined whether or not they exhibit the gender difference in moral orientation hypothesized by Gilligan. One hundred sixty-six African American undergraduates at an historically Black university completed the Moral Orientation Scale, which measures care versus justice moral orientation. The students selected an average of 4.39 care-oriented responses (out of 12). In contrast to predictions that African American culture would lead to the development of a care focus, most participants had a justice focus. In fact, these students were significantly more justice oriented than male law students, who were the most justice oriented of the groups studied by N. Yacker and S. L. Weinberg (1990). There was no evidence of a gender difference in moral orientation. If future research replicates this finding, then Gilligan's theory may need to be modified with regard to African Americans.
Keywords:moral orientation  gender differences  ethnicity differences  moral reasoning  care and justice
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