Location
41.107
Start Date
29-9-2009 12:00 PM
End Date
29-9-2009 12:30 PM
Description
Departments and faculties across a university are increasingly offering courses in ethics for the disciplines that they are teaching. Such courses provide considerable career benefit to the students taking them, as well as to the profession or discipline in which the student will graduate. The paper sets out the research and the arguments that outline the benefits of presenting the courses. To put on the courses however, departments are faced with a number of issues, one of which is coming to grips with a pedagogy that is outside their range of current skills. This paper sets out the priority issues that they face, some suggested responses, and the research that underpins both the issues and several of the responses.
Priorities in teaching ethics
41.107
Departments and faculties across a university are increasingly offering courses in ethics for the disciplines that they are teaching. Such courses provide considerable career benefit to the students taking them, as well as to the profession or discipline in which the student will graduate. The paper sets out the research and the arguments that outline the benefits of presenting the courses. To put on the courses however, departments are faced with a number of issues, one of which is coming to grips with a pedagogy that is outside their range of current skills. This paper sets out the priority issues that they face, some suggested responses, and the research that underpins both the issues and several of the responses.