DocumentCode
2066100
Title
Do ethics courses make engineering students more ethical?
Author
Skinner, Iain M. ; Bushell, Graeme C.
Author_Institution
Fac. of Eng., Univ. of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia
fYear
2013
fDate
26-29 Aug. 2013
Firstpage
78
Lastpage
82
Abstract
To decide whether teaching ethics improves the ethical reasoning of engineering students, an online survey was used to assess their ethical reasoning before and after taking a course in which ethics is taught. Students were asked to consider scenarios requiring ethical judgment and their preferences for pre-conventional, conventional and post-conventional reasoning were measured. Overall, students taking the course with the most emphasis on activities related to ethics showed small but significant movement away from pre- and towards post-conventional reasoning. Local and international and male and female results were compared.
Keywords
educational courses; engineering education; ethical aspects; teaching; engineering students; ethical judgment; ethical reasoning; ethics courses; ethics teaching; post-conventional reasoning; pre-conventional reasoning; Business; Cognition; Conferences; Educational institutions; Engineering students; Ethics; engineering ethics; ethics education; professional ethics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Teaching, Assessment and Learning for Engineering (TALE), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Bali
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/TALE.2013.6654403
Filename
6654403
Link To Document