The students that I have been working with are in stages 3 and 4 of Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development. They are worried about being the good/bad kid and worried about getting in trouble with the school rules. This is what motivates them to stay moral right now. They obey rules and listen to the teacher so that they are seen as the good kid. They will help each other out but only to the point that it will not come back and make them look like the bad kid. Mrs. D just saying their name is enough to quiet them down because they do not want to be seen as the bad kid. This is the stage that I think most of the kids that I will be working with will have reached and stay at for most of the time that I teach them. Setting rules and procedures is important for kids at this stage because without them they do not know how to morally reason.
Dealing with 7th graders has given me a greater appreciation for identity crisis . These students are at an age where everyone expects them to act as though they are adults and make decisions but they are still kids. When it comes to Erik Erikson's Stages of Psychosocial development I think that the students are mostly in the conflict of identity vs. confusion , they are worried about their social interactions and are using them to find their identity. In Mrs. D's AP class I have seen her addressing the students needs in this area more then in her regular classes. This may because they are still so young and may still be experiencing industry vs inferiority but I feel like she could challenge all of her students more. If she exposed her students to different things so that they could be searching for their identity and not just assume that they are still children this could push them father on their path. In reading about James Marcia's identity states I noticed someth...
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