Generativity and moral development as predictors of value-socialization narratives for young persons across the adult life span: From lessons learned to stories shared. |
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Authors: | Pratt, Michael W. Norris, Joan E. Arnold, Mary Louise Filyer, Rebecca |
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Abstract: | Little research so far has examined storytelling as a channel of value socialization. In the present study, 129 adults from 3 age groups (18–26, 28–50, 60–75) were asked to tell stories for adolescents about 2 of their past value-learning experiences. Generative concern (D. P. McAdams & E. de St. Aubin, 1992) and moral reasoning stage level were also assessed. Stronger generative concern was predictive of a greater sense of having learned important lessons from these past events, of stronger adult value socialization investment, and of more engaging narratives for adolescents as judged by a panel of uninstructed raters. Higher levels of moral reasoning were positively related to generative concern and to a stronger sense of past lessons learned. Generativity appears important to the project of value socialization across the adult life span. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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