dc.description.abstract |
Within many professions, decision-makers encounter complex situations or
ethical dilemmas for which a clear resolution is not often obvious. Business and medical
communities have a rich history of research focused on ethics and ethical dilemmas.
While business research tends to focus on the need for establishing guidelines to promote
ethical practice, medical research explores the extent to which ethical practice is
consistent with the Hippocratic oath, “above all, do no harm.” Demands for ethical
leadership in education reflect, in part, a focus on the best interest of the child standard
(Stefkovich & Begley, 2007). Within the field of special education in particular, this
directive becomes a massive challenge given the complexity and significant demands
placed on special education leaders. This study focused primarily on how special
education case managers address ethical dilemmas within the field.
Using the multiple paradigm model developed by Shapiro and Stefkovich (2005),
this study investigated the interaction of personal values and professional codes of ethics
for case managers when faced with ethical dilemmas. Other lines of inquiry included how
personal values are formed, what causes ethical dilemmas, how case managers define
ethical dilemmas, and how personal values and professional codes of ethics operate for
the individual acting alone, as well as within a group dynamic. A web-based survey was
distributed to 10,000 randomly sampled licensed special educators throughout the United
States in order to investigate five research questions. Data were analyzed and reported
based on 730 completed surveys.
Despite a discussion about ethical leadership spanning three decades, scant
research has been conducted in the area of ethics and decision making within the field of
special education (Bon & Bigbee, 2011; Paul, French, & Cranston-Gingras, 2001; Howe
& Miramontes, 1992). The present study sought to explore several areas that have
received limited attention. Overall, case managers report that they were not well prepared
to deal with ethical dilemmas in the field. They also indicate that more time should be
spent discussing ethics within the school, and that national codes of ethics, such as the
code established by the Council for Exception Children, play a relatively insignificant
role in guiding their decisions when faced with ethical dilemmas.
Regarding personal values and professional codes of ethics, findings indicate that
professional codes of ethics dominate the decision-making process, both individually and
within a group dynamic. Case managers report that the main sources of personal values
are education, family, and religion. They also report that the primary sources of ethical
dilemmas were conflicts with parents, administrators, teachers, and compliance
mandates. Lastly, participants also provide a definition of ethical dilemma, which
establishes five key themes that provide a clear composite of the term’s fundamental
components.
Findings from this study are vital in assisting pre-service special education
program coordinators as well as district and school leaders in order to prepare future
special education leaders to address and negotiate ethical dilemmas. This study developed
a language around this discussion of ethics and ethical dilemmas. It also expanded on the
powerful multiple paradigm model developed by Shapiro and Stefkovich (2005), which
contends that personal and professional codes of ethics do not always exist in opposition
to one another, but can co-exist to support the best interests of the child. |
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