Kohlberg conducted studies of moral development based on children’s responses to various scenarios. He was most interested in their moral ______.
a. judgments
b. content
c. theories
d. upbringing
Ans: A
You might also like to view...
Supervisors are not normally assigned to directing and controlling their subordinates' use of authority
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
Intentional behaviors that violate norms but are conducted in honorable ways and for the good of people are acts of ______ deviance.
a. negative b. neutral c. positive d. none of the above
The era in law enforcement when the goal was to increase the professionalization of policing, thus removing it from political pressures, was called ________.
A. the community-oriented period B. the traditional or political period C. the profiling period D. the professional period
Had this checkpoint a “drug checkpoint” instead of a DUI checkpoint, then which statement would be true?
Billy is driving home from a bar on a Friday night when he comes upon a DUI checkpoint. At the checkpoint, an officer smells alcohol on Billy’s breath and asks him to step out of the car. Billy stumbles out of the car and slurs his words when asked a few basic questions about who he is and where he is going. Billy refuses to consent to a breathalyzer, but the officer does have a video camera record Billy as he is stumbling and slurring his words. Billy is arrested on suspicion of DUI and taken to the police station. At the station, a sample of Billy’s blood is taken. Although Billy does not consent to this, he is too drunk to put up much resistance. At his trial, officers play a video of Billy slurring his words and also introduce the blood evidence. He is convicted of DUI. a. Case law indicates that appellate courts would have upheld the use of this checkpoint as well as Billy’s arrest for DUI. b. Case law indicates that appellate courts would have upheld the general use of a “drug checkpoint,” but Billy’s conviction would be overturned because he did not have any drugs. c. Case law indicates that appellate courts would disapprove of a “drug checkpoint” and would also overturn a DUI conviction stemming from a stop at a “drug checkpoint”. d. None of these statements are true.