ABSTRACT

The Ethics of Teaching provides a frank discussion of the most frequently encountered ethical dilemmas that can arise in educational settings, as well as tips on how to avoid these predicaments and how to deal with them when they do occur. The goal is to stimulate discussion and raise faculties' consciousness about ethical issues.

Ethical dilemmas are presented as short, engaging case scenarios, most of which are based on actual situations, so as to furnish more realistic and interesting stimuli for individual reflection and group discussion. These scenarios offer the opportunity to consider the subtle complexities inherent in the social and psychological contexts in which educator-student interactions occur and the effects of those complexities on ethical decision making. Each case is followed by a detailed analysis and advice. The book's 195 cases are grouped into 22 chapters representing topics, such as the controversial classroom presentations and assignments, debatable testing and grading practices, problematic student-faculty interactions, dual-role relationships with students, collegial conflicts, managing very difficult students, and confidentiality dilemmas.

The Ethics of Teaching: A Casebook, Second Edition:
*focuses on commonly encountered ethical "gray areas" that have no clear solution;
*includes questions to stimulate discussion of related ethical issues;
*concludes with a chapter on prevention, peer mentoring, and intervention; and
*serves as excellent "assigned reading" to stimulate group discussion in teaching workshops and faculty development programs.

The first edition of this book evolved by collecting a variety of teaching situations that commonly occur in college and university settings. The authors then created responses to the situations and circulated both the cases and the responses to reviewers from a number of departments across the country. As a result, the vast majority of the cases are "discipline free." The second edition features many new cases to reflect recent trends and events related to academic ethics. Questions were added to stimulate discussion and to further elaborate the issues.

The Ethics of Teaching: A Casebook is ideal for college and university faculty, graduate assistants, and administrators involved in workshops, graduate teaching assistant courses, and faculty development and new faculty orientation programs. As a result of the book's cross-disciplinary development, it will be beneficial to faculty from a broad spectrum of disciplines.

part I|2 pages

The Classroom Ambiance

chapter 1|11 pages

Instructors’ Classroom Policies

chapter 2|13 pages

Student Deportment in the Classroom

part II|2 pages

The Classroom Learning Experience

chapter 4|9 pages

Required In-Class Learning Activities

part III|2 pages

Assessment of Students

chapter 5|16 pages

Testing and Other Academic Evaluations

chapter 6|16 pages

Grading Methods

chapter 7|5 pages

Feedback to Students

chapter 8|11 pages

Writing Reference Letters for Students

chapter 9|11 pages

Biased Treatment of Students

chapter 10|11 pages

Academic Dishonesty

part IV|2 pages

Outside the Classroom

chapter 11|6 pages

Availability to Students

chapter 12|6 pages

Student-Faculty Interactions

part V|2 pages

Relationships in Academia

chapter 14|12 pages

Interprofessional Relations

chapter 15|9 pages

Exploitation of Students

chapter 16|7 pages

Discrimination

chapter 17|8 pages

Manipulative Students and Instructors

part VI|2 pages

Responsibilities to Students and Colleagues

chapter 19|14 pages

Instructor Competency

chapter 20|11 pages

Confidentiality Issues

chapter 21|11 pages

Political and Public Statements

chapter 22|7 pages

Responsibilities to the Institution