العوامل الخمس الكبري للشخصية وأساليب المعاملة الوالدية كمنبئات بفك الارتباط الأخلاقي لدى المراهقين


Ar

This study aimed to determine the prevalence of moral disengagement among a sample of adolescents and to explore the differences in moral disengagement based on gender and place of residence. Additionally, the study sought to investigate the relationships between moral disengagement and both the Big Five personality traits and parental treatment styles among adolescents. Furthermore, the study aimed to determine the extent to which the Big Five personality traits and parental treatment styles contribute to explaining moral disengagement among adolescents, and to examine the personality dynamics of adolescents with high and low levels of moral disengagement. The study sample included 400 middle school students (both males and females) aged between 13 and 15, with a mean age of 14 years and a standard deviation of 0.675. The following instruments were used: Bandura's Moral Disengagement Scale (1996), the Big Five Personality Traits Scale by Barbaranelli (2008), and the Parental Treatment Styles Scale by Amani Abdel Maksoud (2015). The study found that the prevalence of moral disengagement varied among adolescents, with no significant differences based on gender or place of residence. There were statistically significant negative correlations between the Big Five personality traits and moral disengagement. (Published abstract)