1 / 15

Disability Ethics

Disability Ethics. Dr Paul Jewell Faculty of Health Sciences & School of Education Flinders University http://www.disabilityethics.net/ http://www.hbe.com.au/teaching-ethics-care-think-and-choose.html. Ethics. - the study of how people should treat each other .

ckern
Télécharger la présentation

Disability Ethics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Disability Ethics Dr Paul Jewell Faculty of Health Sciences & School of Education Flinders University http://www.disabilityethics.net/ http://www.hbe.com.au/teaching-ethics-care-think-and-choose.html

  2. Ethics - the study of how people should treat each other. This includes the notions of right and wrong, values, relationships, justice, fairness, consequences, autonomy, rights and respect.

  3. Professionals people with high levels of expertise and responsibilities in the provision of services. The term professionals can mean practitioners, professionals, providers, managers, policy makers and government officials.

  4. Professional Ethics the standards that should guide professionals’ interactions with clients within their professional roles and responsibilities. Professional ethics includes ethical standards that should guide practitioners, professionals, providers, managers, policy makers and government officials.

  5. Clients the recipients of professionals’ services. Students. Parents. Contractors/funders. Other parts of the community.

  6. 3 reasons for Professional Ethics • Special Responsibility • Knowledge, power, authority • Regulated role

  7. A Community Approach This approach starts from the idea that it is human nature for people to care about each other, form relations with each other and come to agreements about how to treat each other. Dr Paul Jewell, Flinders University

  8. A Consequences Approach • What makes an action right/wrong is whether it has good/bad consequences, whether it increases/decreases the welfare of the people affected by it. • By ‘good’, we could mean happiness, well-being, pleasure, interest or satisfaction.

  9. A Principles Approach Universally applicable rules. EG if someone says it is never right to lie, they are appealing to principle. Some common principles are: Respect others’ autonomy Always tell the truth. Keep your promises. Don’t use people.

  10. Virtue Ethics According to Virtue theory, the right thing to do is what a good person would do. To become a good person, one should develop habits of behaviour which then constitute the character of a virtuous person. E.G. an honest character is someone who consistently and reliably tells the truth.

  11. Community policy is for schools to produce • ’ I literate, I numerate, I problem-solving, I creative, I well-mannered, I well-presented and I healthy individuals I meeting the specialist demands of the economy….’

  12. Universal Design?

More Related