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May 23, 2013
 ProgramsHigh SchoolJA Business Ethics™     

JA High School Programs

 

JA Business Ethics™ Minimize

Through hands-on classroom activities, JA Business Ethics fosters students’ ethical decision-making as they prepare to enter the workforce and take part in the global marketplace. Students will recognize and analyze theory, terminology, and concepts; apply skills; and evaluate ethical decision-making. Seven required, five supplemental, volunteer-led sessions.

 

SESSIONS KEY LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Session One: Ethos Island

Students participate in a simulation that introduces them to the topic of ethics. They examine the rationale for ethical standards in an interdependent group.

  • Define ethics and interdependence.
  • Express the rationale of the importance of ethical behavior in an interdependent group—personal interest verses society’s best interest.
  • Recognize how ethics are different from rules.

Session Two: Values, Goals, and Choices

Students analyze personal ethical beliefs and examine their own values and goals. Students begin to make plans for achieving one-, five-, and ten-year goals.

  • Evaluate personal values in ethical dilemmas.
  • Articulate and identify the steps necessary to maintain and accomplish personal values and goals.
  • Recognize the importance of identifying and understanding personal values as a means of avoiding unethical choices.

Session Three: How to Decide?

Students are introduced to four major ethical theories and apply them to scenarios while analyzing their own ethical philosophy.

  • Recognize their assumptions and beliefs about ethics and how their views align with the major theories of ethics.

Session Four: Ethical Decision-Making

Students explore an ethical decision-making model and evaluate their personal decision-making processes.        

  • Apply an ethical decision-making process to workplace dilemmas.
  • Evaluate possible changes to their own decision-making processes.

Session Five: Organizational Ethics

Students explore professional duties and ethical conflicts within various departments in a business. Working in groups, they apply their knowledge to a real-life situation.

  • Express ethical conflicts as situations vary by job and department in a business.
  • Apply to the scenarios information about each department’s potential ethical challenges.

Session Six: Social Responsibility

Working in groups, students explore two prevalent, but conflicting, theories of social responsibility in business ethics and compare their personal beliefs and behaviors with both theories.

  • Recognize and apply the two prevalent theories of social responsibility in business ethics.
  • Evaluate personal values related to the theories of social responsibility in business ethics.

Session Seven: Multinational Issues

Through a role-playing activity, students explore several complex ethical issues found in global business. This culminating session incorporates the overall program concepts. 

  • Recognize the connections between interdependence, social responsibility choices, and ethical decision-making through exploring global issues.

Supplemental Session A: Ethos Island Code of Ethics

 

Students learn the importance of a code of ethics and practice writing one for their Ethos Island society.

  • Articulate the benefits or advantages of having a code of ethics.
  • Develop a code of ethics for a simulated society.

Supplemental Session B: Heroes, Role Models, and Mentors

 

Students examine the importance of obtaining external assistance when making ethical decisions. They explore the characteristics of heroes, role models, and mentors and the importance of having them in their lives.

  • Express the importance of positive, external assistance during the ethical decisions-making process.
  • Recognize characteristics and sources of heroes, role models, and mentors.

Supplemental Session C: Bad Choices from Bad Logic—Fallacies

 

Students are introduced to 10 common fallacies so they can act on what they know is ethical.

  • Recognize common fallacies of logic in persuasive arguments.
  • Act on what they know to be the ethical choice.

Supplementary Session D: Organizational Ethics—Marketing vs. Propaganda

 

Students learn about organizational ethics by examining the duties responsibilities, and unique ethical challenges faced by a marketing department. They compare ethical decision-making using a code of ethics with unethical marketing using propaganda. 

  • Express the importance of a code of ethics.
  • Analyze a department in a business to consider how it balances potential ethical conflicts with the duties of that department.
  • Compare the ethical guidelines of the marketing field with common propaganda techniques.

Supplemental Session E: Employee Ethics

 

Students explore practical ethical guidelines they may encounter in the world of work. Working in groups, they create public service announcements.

  • Express the need to recognize and avoid ethical pitfalls in a new work environment.
  • Understand practical guidelines they may encounter in the world of work.

 

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