A case-based tool to assess college students’ perceptions about ethical competence
Keywords
Higher EducationLearning
Educational systems
Teaching
Ethical values
Ethical competence
Ethical learning
College learning
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http://hdl.handle.net/10251/104756Abstract
[EN] The main objective of this study was to design a new tool to explore the perception of professionally-related ethical values in Health Sciences undergraduate students. For this purpose, 24 conversational interviews, as well as an extensive literature review, were initially employed. Then, five ethical values were selected: respect for the patient, altruism, empathy, responsibility for my actions, and lifelong learning. Next, twenty cases with ethical dilemmas were created with protagonists pertaining to four degrees in the Health Sciences: Nursing, Dentistry, Physical Therapy, and Medicine. These cases were examined by professionals from these fields and presented to a sample of students to analyze their functioning. Our results indicate that the cases are easy to understand as most cases were identified correctly. Interestingly, students reported “respect for the patient” as the most important ethical value. The least important value was “altruism.” This new tool adds a practical perspective based on clinical cases with real-life dilemmas. Further studies are needed to continue exploring this topic.Gonzalez-Cuevas, G.; Lopez Del Hierro, M.; Martinez, N.; Hernando, MA. (2017). A case-based tool to assess college students’ perceptions about ethical competence. En Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Higher Education Advances. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. 1271-1277. doi:10.4995/HEAD17.2017.5581
OCS
1271
1277
Date
2017-06-26Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPartIdentifier
oai:riunet.upv.es:10251/104756urn:isbn:9788490485903
http://hdl.handle.net/10251/104756
info:doi:10.4995/HEAD17.2017.5581