PART I: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES AND PHILOSOPHICAL FOUNDATIONS 1. An Interdisciplinary Approach to Moral Education 2. The Just Community Approach to Moral Education in Theory and Practice 3. Autonomy and Universalization as Moral Principles: A Dispute with Kohlberg, Utilitarianism and Discourse Ethics 4. The Process of Moral Decision-Making: Normative and Empirical Conditions of Participation in Moral Discourse PART II: APPLICATIONS AND INTERVENTIONS A. THE FAMILY 5. Parents as Moral Educators 6. Moral Development and Personal Reliability: The Impact of the Family on Two Aspects of Moral Consciousness in Adolescence 7. The Role of Affective Processes in Moral Judgment Performance B.THE SCHOOL8. The Role of Discussion in Moral Education 9. Democratic Moral Education in the Large Public High School C. THE WORKPLACE AND PROFESSIONAL TRAINING 10. Work Climate and Socio-Moral Development in Two Worker-Owned Companies 11. But it Does Move: The Difficulty of Gradual Change in Moral Development 12. Classical Ethics and Live Patient Simulations in the Moral Education of Health Care Professionals 13. Stage, Phase, and Style: The Developmental Dynamics of the Self 14. Moral Reasoning in the Assessment and Outcome of Suicidal Breakdown 15. The Adolescent as Interpersonal Negotiator: Three Portraits of Social Development PART III: CRITIQUES AND REVISIONS 16. Moral Intervention: A Skeptical Note 17. Limited Morality: A Concept and its Educational Implications 18. The Postconventional Level of Moral Development: Psychology of Philosophy? 19. The Moral Personality: Reflections for Social Science and Education
Marvin W. Berkowitz Marquette University, Fritz Oser University of Fribourg