The Leadership Training Activity Book: 50 Exercises

(John Hannent) #1
MATERIALS
Handout 24.1: How to Make Ethical Decisions

EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES
 Flipcharts and markers
 Large poster-size version of model
ROOM SET-UP
Arrange tables and chairs in a semicircle

Comments


Ask people to discuss ethical dilemmas with which they are familiar so the model can
be applied to real-life situations. Send out a few assignments in advance, such as:
 Identify 3 to 5 personal standards you live by. (Review your list of values to
help you.) Identify any written or unwritten standards your company lives by.

 Identify a time at work when you felt as if your ethical standards were
threatened or compromised.
 Contact your trainer in advance if you are currently facing an ethical dilemma
that you are willing to talk about in the workshop.

VARIATION
Instead of using examples from participants, write a case study or select one from a
published source (such as the one here) to use for the activity.

RESOURCE
Dalke, David, and Anderstar, Sheryl. Balancing Personal and Professional Ethics.Amherst
MA: HRD Press, 1995.

Trainer’s Notes for Activity 24
STEP-BY-STEP PROCEDURE

Step 1: Introduce the topic by summarizing various highly publicized breaches of
ethics (such as the Enron scandal) or an ethical dilemma you have
personally faced. You could also invite a guest who tells an ethical story
that will set the stage for this activity.
Step 2: Define “ethics” by asking participants to explain what the word means to
them. List their answers on the flipchart. They are likely to mention

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