Class Notes for EDUC 600 4_8_2008
Dawn Pollanen and Audrey Gagel
The Ethics of Teaching- Kenneth Strike and Jonas Soltis
Chapter 1:
-Code of Ethics
-First Case:
-catches a student plagiarizing
· People’s reactions
o Give him a short time to correct his mistake
o University policies
o What is the student’s definition of plagiarism. Does he understand what it really means?
o He still needs to be taught a lesson
o The rules are in place for a reason
§ Turn him in and then talk to the administration to see if after losing his scholarship is there another way for him to get his tuition covered
o Things have to be fair for everyone
o Looking at his background, what kind of motivation did he have to do this?
o Why didn’t he go to the teacher before this point if he was struggling
o If you bend the rules for this one student what do you do for the next student?
· Is there a right answer to this situation?
o Integrity- of the teacher
· Are ethical claims possible?
o Factual claims are easily verified
o Ethical claims are not factual claims
o Ethical claims are also not statements of preference
o Ethical claims are normative
· If you have made the decision to fail him and then are asked to justify this decision, what do you say?
o Are ethical claims verifiable and if yes, how?
o Class discussions on plagiarism- he knew what he was doing
· What is the intent of the law or rule?
· Consequences seem to matter to most people. How does that influence your decision? This is one path to justification.
o How do we project the consequences?
o How do we decide the good or bad of a consequence?
o Based on previous experiences we can predict future consequences
o The consequentialist would most likely lean towards not failing the child because the positive immediate outcomes outweigh the negative.
CONSEQUENTIALISM:
- · principle of benefit maximization (page 11)
- · intent is irrelevant, all that matters is consequences (winning office pool)
- (Discussion: Consequences seem to matter; did the kid know/ part of reasoning, there could be negative consequences for you in the future. The decisions that are wrong and immoral have the worse consequences.)
- What’s the way to go? How do we project what the exact consequences are going to be? We can not determine all consequences.
- · Key element of consequentialism: good needs to be produced and maximized in consequentialist’s point of view. Omniscient/non-omniscient problem arise. Lean towards not failing/give second chance.
- · What good is going to come out of me failing him? If you fail the kid, it’s going to be really bad for him and his family.
- · Most well know form of consequentialism is utilitarianism…you have to decide what is good consequence and bad consequence; good is pleasure. Judge each act by individual measure; judge each rule by it maximizing the rule; if you are a rule utilitarian; FAIR does not matter. Fairness adds a moral or value, this is not a part of consequentialism.
- · There is a system for deciding on what is fair, the result will change depending on the variables
o Problem: you don’t know what the future will hold.
o Issue of quantification of good becomes an issue, what is relevant or not—hassling of students better or worse than kid getting flunked out of school?
o Can lead us into immoral territory.
Thoughts and reactions to this:
**a lot of us decide by this way; it’s hard to look at the outcome
**if I was in this situation, I’d do this, if I was doing this, etc…
NONCONSEQUENTIALISM:
- · The Golden Rule
- · Principle of equal respect of persons (p. 15)
- · Intent matters
- · Kant is the father
- · There are two ways of thinking about it: 1) you should only act in a way that you think is universal law; 2)act as a way to treat others as ends as opposed to means as an end.
o You should not treat people to cater to your own desire
o That everyone is a free agent
o All agents are any moral value; they are free, rational, and responsible moral agents—we must respect their freedom of choice (p.15)
o no one is better than the next
o Consequences are not morally important
o We must be held accountable for our own actions
**fairness of the rule, if you are following rules; do the rules promote respect for persons? Rules aren’t to be followed just because they are rules
How do we evaluate the means to an end? Consequences seem to be a part of it…
-Second Case:
-Ms. Jones, Mr. Pugnacious, and Johnnie
-group discussion
- They summarize the case
- Why did she take the path she did?
- Why did she take him to Johnnie?
- Why didn’t she call Social Services or Security?
- Was it wrong or right for her to lie?
- The security of those involved comes first but then she should tell the truth so things don’t get worst
- Johnnie wasn’t in on the lie. So when it comes out that he started the fight he is still going to get in trouble
- It was a gut reaction not a thought out process
- Instinct to protect the child and then take care of the consequences
- It does happen that irate or drunk parents come in, you have to call dss or other officials
- You need to take another step to take it from happening again
- You are given a lot of information to consider very quickly
- It is the first time she is presented with a situation like this
- Is the lie really the ethical problem here?
- How she follows up the lie and with the situation is more important
- She immediately realizes her mistake
-Comments from the outer circle:
- Most people approached it from a consequential point of view
- Initial reaction is to protect the child even if that means you lie
- This is not a situation where you are thinking things through, or where you have extra time. This is an impulse situation.
- In non-consequentialism lying would never be a good thing to do. It can not be turned into a universal law
Chapter 2:
Due process
· Case three:
Chemistry class/ Mr. Fuse
o Did the teacher react fairly?
o Punishing the entire class and the anonymous note
o Should he have left the class unattended
o Due process—moral decisions are arrived through a process; teacher’s decisions need not be arbitrary or capricious; punishment is appropriate to the situation.
o Reaction: he had a short fuse; little evidence and the kid didn’t have a chance to defend himself; no evidence of who saw what; is there enough evidence to convict Alex yet he still gets in trouble
o Kyle would ask “What would Dewey do?” and the Perry Mason, Scooby-doo approach ensued
o Mr. Fuse punishment in either situation is flawed; what would you do?
§ Get someone to confess
§ New lock
§ Nothing he can really do about it but educate students; cops do fingerprints
§ Keep whole class punished—students had to have been aware and no one stopped this from happening.. kids that don’t fess up are accomplices
§ Don’t give kid “F”, it will go on permanent record and harm their college career/future; don’t use this way as an example
§ Should whole class be punished? About ½ of class, though some hesitant, thought so; rationale: responsibility and detourant
§ You want to maximize rationale so that an incident never happens again.
§ Does Mr. Fuse deserve to be punished
3 comments:
WWDD? I new bracelet?
I'm thinking you could start a trend!
Ha Ha! Ya'll r funny!
Post a Comment