Learning mechanism |
Direct instructions about “right” and “wrong” behavior through literary examples and models |
Imagination of the perspectives and emotions of fictional characters |
Argumentative dialogues with peers about initial responses to narrative fiction |
Developmental outcomes |
Accumulation of abstract moral propositions; culturally conforming social behavior |
ToM, empathy |
Social reasoning, interpersonal competences |
Type of narrative fiction |
“Classic” stories with straightforward moral messages |
Narrative fiction of high literary quality (literary fiction) |
Narrative fiction with complexity and ambiguity |
Instructional principles |
Strong didactic guidance toward a single "right" text interpretation |
Eliciting spontaneous and individual responses to literary fiction through creative tasks and peer dialogues |
Supporting argumentative dialogues with peers; critical examination of initial responses |
Educational relationships |
Asymmetric and hierarchical text-child and adult–child relationships; adults as moral experts, children as moral novices |
Symmetric adult–child relationships; peers as important source for sociomoral learning |
Symmetric and flexible power relationships in the classroom; peers as important source for sociomoral learning |