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Margarita Pérez-Pulido; Aurora González-Teruel – Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 2023
In European universities, teaching ethics has acquired special relevance with the Bologna Process and changes in curriculum. In Spain, the White Book of the Degree in Information and Documentation incorporates ethics as a specific competence, through the combination of ethical, social, and legal content, as a transversal competence. In this…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Attitudes, Information Science Education, Foreign Countries
Lee, Jeong-Kyu – Online Submission, 2020
This article is focused on the relevance between Christianity and happiness from a perspective of higher education. To discuss the article systematically, three research questions are addressed. First, what is happiness in the Bible? Second, what are relations between Christianity and happiness from the Biblical standpoint? Last, what is the…
Descriptors: Christianity, Psychological Patterns, Higher Education, Religious Factors
Westheimer, Joel – Action in Teacher Education, 2016
In "Moral-Character Development for Teacher Education," Daniel Lapsley and Ryan Woodbury argue that teacher education licensure and accreditation standards largely ignore matters of values, character, and morality. "The moral-character formation of children," they note, "is the instructional objective that dare not speak…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Moral Values, Citizenship, Citizenship Education
Liu, Xiangdong – Philosophical Studies in Education, 2014
In this article, the author examines Dewey's moral deliberation. Liu argues that Dewey's work will enrich both character education and Kohlberg's moral education. Liu focuses on character education and on Kohlberg's moral education because these are the two dominant approaches. Character education seeks to cultivate good…
Descriptors: Values Education, Moral Values, Citizenship Education, Children
Giesinger, Johannes – Educational Theory, 2012
In this essay, Johannes Giesinger discusses the educational significance of Immanuel Kant's conception of human dignity. According to Kant, Giesinger claims, children can and should be educated for dignity: on the one hand, children realize their dignity by developing the capacity for moral autonomy; on the other hand, this capacity can only…
Descriptors: Ethics, Human Dignity, Educational Philosophy, Moral Development
Atkinson, Timothy N.; Butler, Jesse W. – Journal of Research Administration, 2012
The following article argues that the research compliance system has some flaws that should be addressed, particularly with regard to excessive emphasis of and reliance upon formal regulations in research administration. Ethical formalism, understood here as the use of formal rules for the determination of behavior, is not an optimal perspective…
Descriptors: Ethics, Research Administration, Compliance (Legal), Administrative Organization
Caldicott, Catherine V.; Braun, Eli A. – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2011
Since ethical issues in the contemporary delivery of health care involve doctors, nurses, technicians, and members of other health professions, the authors consider whether members of diverse health care occupations might benefit from studying ethics in a single classroom. While interprofessional courses may be better at teaching the ethics of the…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Allied Health Occupations Education, Health Personnel, Ethics
Gabriele, Edward – Journal of Research Administration, 2012
Research administration and leadership, above all, directly serve the needs of researchers, scientists, research programs, institutions and their leaders, and the public trust itself. Research administration is therefore an expansive and all encompassing profession. It integrates all of the diverse arts and sciences that are foundational to…
Descriptors: Ethics, Research Administration, Leadership, Cultural Pluralism
Holma, Katariina – Educational Theory, 2011
The crucial epistemological question for formulating the principles that underlie moral education concerns the status of rationality and objectivity in ethics and education. In this essay Katariina Holma argues that the intertwined understanding of the concepts of education, ethics, rationality, and objectivity is built into our language and our…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Values Education, Moral Values
Slote, Michael – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
I respond to Noddings with further clarification of the notion of empathy and also argue that previous care ethics has put too much of an exclusive emphasis on relationships. I respond to Darwall by pointing out some implausible implications of his own and Kantian views about respect and by showing how a sentimentalist approach can avoid those…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Moral Values, Ethics, Empathy
Noddings, Nel – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
Michael Slote's very interesting work on moral sentimentalism and moral education raises some important questions on the meaning of empathy, the limitations of "inductions", and the development of moral education from the perspective of care ethics. These questions are addressed in this commentary. (Contains 5 notes.)
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Empathy, Values Education
Wren, Thomas – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
Although I think most of what Michael Slote asserts in his article "Sentimentalist moral education" is correct, I worry about three important ideas that are conspicuous by their absence. The first is the possibility that human emotions and feelings are inherently cognitive, which is never considered in his psychological account of empathy. The…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Empathy, Moral Development
Willems, Frank; Denessen, Eddie; Hermans, Chris; Vermeer, Paul – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2010
The question explored in this article is whether religious schools can contribute to the formation of the civic virtues in pupils by means of citizenship education. It is commonly agreed that civic virtues are needed in pluriform Western societies to promote social cohesion and reduce hostile attitudes. However, some argue that religious schools…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Catholics, Citizenship, Citizenship Education
Sternberg, Robert J. – Educational Leadership, 2011
Translating ethics knowledge into ethical behavior is much harder than it appears, writes Sternberg. In this article, he outlines an eight-step process that individuals must go through to act in an ethical way--for example, recognizing that there is an event to which to react, taking personal responsibility for generating an ethical solution to…
Descriptors: Ethics, Behavior Change, Responses, Problem Solving
Darwall, Stephen – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
Michael Slote proposes a rethinking of moral education from the perspective of a normative ethics of care combined with his distinctive sentimentalist metaethics. I raise questions concerning the role of empathy in Slote's picture and argue that empathy is related to respect and sentiments through which we hold ourselves and one another…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Empathy, Moral Issues