Reconceptualizing Moral Development through Indigenous Narrative Counselling: A Culturally Responsive Model from Nigeria


  •  Adegoke O. Okeowo    
  •  Olayinka A. Adesehinwa    
  •  Sunday G. Olawale    

Abstract

Rapid social transformation, digital globalization, and changing family structures have reshaped traditional mechanisms of moral socialization in Nigeria. In urban and semi urban communities, educators and counsellors observe tensions between inherited communal values and evolving digital cultures. These shifts contribute to identity confusion, weakened intergenerational dialogue, and psychosocial strain among youth, creating complex emotional and developmental landscapes that require culturally grounded counselling approaches.

This conceptual paper examines the psychological and cultural dimensions of value transformation and proposes a culturally responsive counselling framework called Folktale Therapy for Value Reorientation. Drawing on Humanistic Theory, Social Learning Theory, Narrative Identity Theory, and African Indigenous Psychology grounded in Ubuntu philosophy, the paper illustrates how culturally embedded storytelling may facilitate moral internalization, identity coherence, and prosocial development. Empirical literature on narrative interventions, moral development, and culturally adapted psychotherapy is reviewed to support the model’s plausibility. A structured empirical validation framework is outlined to guide future research. Integrating indigenous narrative traditions within counselling practice offers a theoretically coherent, contextually appropriate, and ethically grounded approach to supporting youth identity formation in multicultural and postcolonial contexts.



This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.