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Ethical Leadership in dealing with Complex Dilemmas

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Title: Ethical Leadership in dealing with Complex Dilemmas


1
Ethical Leadership in dealing with Complex
Dilemmas
2
Introduction
  • What is ethical Leadership
  • Why does ethical leadership matter?
  • Who decides whats ethical?
  • Applying Ethical Frames.

3
Ethical Leadership in dealing with Complex
Dilemmas
  • Ethical Leadership
  • What ethics do leaders model?
  • Ethics are the principles, values and beliefs
    that define what is right and wrong behavior.
    Leadership is the process of influencing others
    to achieve goals. Ethical leadership is the
    process of influencing people through principles,
    values and beliefs that embrace what we have
    defined as right behavior.
  • Jane A.Van Buren, Vermont University

4
Ethical Leadership in dealing with Complex
Dilemmas
  • Ethical Leadership as Relationship BuildingThe
    ethical leader understands that positive
    relationships are the gold standard for all
    organizational effort. Good quality relationships
    built on respect and trust, not necessarily
    agreement, are the single most important
    determinant of organizational success.
  • Desmond Berghofer and Geraldine Schwartz,
    Institute for Ethical Leadership

5
Why does Ethical Leadership matter?
  • Civic mission of schoolsFor democracy to
    flourish, public education must play a central
    role in promoting responsible moral action that
    serves the common good. Charles Haynes, First
    Amendment Center
  • To educate a person in mind and not in morals is
    to educate a menace to society.Theodore
    Roosevelt

6
Why does Ethical Leadership matter?
  • Dealing with ethical issues in education
    leadership is not necessarily a legal issue but a
    necessary approach for several reasons
  • Governance
  • It provides a consistent approach in dealing with
    ethical issues as a critical part of good
    governance
  • Upholding an organizations mission and values
  • Putting the institutions mission and values into
    action and effectively monitor their success
  • 3. Guidance for Staff
  • Ensuring that all members of staff are aware of
    how they are expected to conduct themselves
  • 4. Legislation
  • Helps to interpret educational laws by focusing
    on the letter and the spirit of the laws

7
Why does Ethical Leadership matter?
  • Risk and Reputation
  • By Addressing ethical issues, this can help to
    identify potential risks, prevent future problems
    and safeguard the reputation of the institution.
  • Recruiting Staff and Attracting Students
  • Establishing a clear ethical stance will
    contribute to the quality of staff and students
    that the institution attracts.
  • 7. Encouraging funding, sponsorship and business
    involvement
  • Companies are interested in institutions that are
    committed to ethics and transparency and by
    addressing ethics it may result in the
    institution being more appealing to potential
    business partners
  • Council for Industry and Higher Education (CIHE)

8
SummaryWhy does ethical Leadership matter?
  • Part of our leadership codeStandard 5 An
    education leader promotes the success of every
    student by acting with integrity, fairness, and
    in an ethical manner. Source Educational
    Leadership Policy Standards ISLLC 2008 as
    adopted by the National Policy Board for
    Educational Administration (NPBEA) on December
    12, 2007.

9
SummaryWhy does ethical Leadership matter?
  • Make us more effective as leadersEthics is
    ultimately about relationships. No matter what
    definition of ethics you examine, ethics is not
    primarily about standards, rules, and sanctions
    in isolation from society. Ethics is about people
    and their relationships with one another.What
    brought down Anderson Accounting was not law.
    It was ethicsor more exactly, a lack of public
    trust. When Anderson could no longer be trusted
    to resist unethical behavior it effectively lost
    its most important resource credibility.
    Negative ethics equals negative business.

10
Who decides whats ethical?
  • Educational leaders come to the job with personal
    values that they have developed because of
    different influences. The challenge has always
    been how to balance these values with those
    existing in the institution.
  • Rushmore Kidders research identified 5 core
    moral values
  • Honesty
  • Respect
  • Responsibility
  • Fairness
  • Compassion
  • Rushmore Kidder, in Shared Values for a Troubled
    World Comversations with Men and Women of
    Conscience (1994 ) and Moral Courage (2005)

11
Applying Ethical Frames
  • The use of ethical frames provide an opportunity
    for educational leaders to examine their ways of
    thinking about complex dilemmas.
  • To consider actions outside their normal way of
    thinking and behaving
  • These frames give a holistic approach to
    resolving issues and engaging in reflective
    practice

12
Applying Ethical Frames
  • Ethical paradigms
  • Ethic of Justice
  • Ethic of Critique
  • Ethic of Care
  • Ethic of Profession
  • Personal Code
  • Shapiro Stefkovich, Ethical Leadership and
    Decision Making in Education, LEA 2005
  • Shapiro Gross, Ethical Educational Leadership
    in Turbulent Times, LEA, 2008

13
Multiple Ethical Paradigms
Ethic of Local Community
Ethic of Care
Ethic of Critique
Ethic of the Profession
Ethic of Justice
14
Applying Ethical Frames
  • Ethic of Justice
  • Rights
  • Policies
  • Law
  • Ethical dilemmas resolved by rules, fairness,
    equity, and justice
  • Equity and Equality
  • Right vs Right
  • What circumstances justify exceptions
  • Individual rights vs. community good

15
Applying Ethical Frames
  • Ethic of Critique
  • Awakens educators to inequities in society.
  • Who makes law?
  • Who benefits?
  • Who has power?
  • Who is silenced?
  • Ethical dilemmas resolved by asking how all
    children can be enabled to overcome past
    inequities to grow, learn and achieve.

16
Applying Ethical Frames
  • Ethic of Care
  • The first job of schools is to care for our
    children. Noddings, 1992
  • Who is hurt?
  • What are long-term effects of the decision?
  • Caring, concern, connection
  • Decision-making requires leaders to consider
    multiple voices.

17
Applying Ethical Frames
  • Ethic of Profession
  • Education, unlike law, medicine, dentistry and
    business, require little or no formal training in
    ethics.
  • Codes of Ethics authored by professional
    associations have filled that gap somewhat.
  • Eg. JTA Code of Ethics and The Jamaica Teaching
    Council Draft Bill

18
Applying Ethical Frames
  • Ethic of Local Community
  • What does the community think about the
    particular issue that affects the institution?
  • How does the community feel about the issue?

19
Case 1
  • An assistant principal in a rather conservative
    town completes a teacher performance appraisal on
    one of the schools master teachers. The only
    part of the evaluation that concerns the AP is
    the fact that this staff member has never taken
    part in any of the schools extra curricular
    programs. The AP assumes that her teachers
    family life must be taking up his spare time.
    Conflict arises when the AP decides to purchase a
    gag gift from an unpopular adult fantasy store.
    In her hast while shopping, she notice her master
    teacher emerging from the back room of the Adult
    Fantasy store. As it turns out, he and his wife
    run the lucrative business and have preferred to
    keep their business enterprise a secret. They
    operate the business so that they can afford to
    put their children through university as well as
    afford the extras in life.
  • Multi-paradigm questions to ponder
  • 1) Are teachers role models? If yes, then is it
    acceptable for a teacher to be part owner of an
    adult centre?
  • 2) Could the teachers decision to take on this
    particular job be justified when one considers
    that his job as a teacher is valued so little by
    society that he is unable to earn enough from it
    to support his family? To educate his children?
  • 3) What should the teacher do? What would be in
    the best interests of the students? Would you see
    this decision differently if the principal were
    male? If the teacher were female?

20
Case 2
  • Coach Alex and his wife were excellent substitute
    teachers who committed themselves to their jobs.
    Coach Alex eventually obtained a permanent
    teaching position and his career was looking up.
    As time passed, the community developed deep
    regard for such a visible and successful coach
    who helped many young athletes gain scholarships
    and professional sport membership. On the home
    front, Coach Alex was much different however.
    News began to spread that Coach Alex was arrested
    twice for beating his wife and placing her in
    hospital. Both times his wife dropped the charges
    and let her husband off the hook. As the news
    spread, many parents became outraged and wrote
    letters to the board and signed petitions to have
    coach Alex fired. At the next board meeting the
    oversized crowd became irate and shouted out
    commands for the board to take action. After the
    president of the Parent-Teachers Association
    spoke on behalf of the crowd, she turned toward
    Superintendent Brown and said, What are you
    going to do about this?
  • Multi-paradigm questions to ponder 
  • 1) What is the fairest choice Superintendent
    Brown could make? The most caring?
  • 2) Could it be argued that spousal abuse is a
    disease as alcoholism is a disease? Why or why
    not? 
  • 3) What advice would you give to Superintendent
    Brown?

21
Case Sharing
22
Questions and Answers
23
Final Words
  • The importance of having an ethical
    administratoris inherent to the success of the
    school as a social entity
  • Society or we do not invent principles they are
    the laws of the universe that pertain to human
    relationships and human organizations. To the
    degree people recognize and live in harmony with
    such basic principles as fairness, equity,
    justice, integrity, honesty, and trust, they move
    toward either survival and stability on the one
    hand or disintegration and destruction on the
    other. Covey, 1992
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