Ethical Leadership Syllabus Fall 2015
Ethical Leadership Syllabus Fall 2015
Ethical Leadership Syllabus Fall 2015
Fall 2015
Section 007: Tuesday/Thursday 4:15 5:30 p.m.
151 Willard Building
Instructor: Dr. Michael D. Burroughs
129A Sparks Building
814.867.0471 (office)
mdb32@psu.edu
Class Focus:
A primary focus of this class centers on better understanding the relationship between leadership
and ethics. Must one be ethical in order to be a leader? How important should ethics be to
leaders? What qualities are essential for the ethical leader to possess? Who is/can be an ethical
leader? What are the challenges of ethical leadership?
Answering these questions and understanding the relationship between leadership and ethics
more generally requires that we develop a preliminary understanding of both leadership and
ethics. Both of these concepts are complex with multiple meanings and manifestations in
practice. We will pursue a better understanding of these concepts through discussion and
personal and collective reflection (focusing on what you and we, as a class, consider essential to
leadership and ethics) and through crafting a conceptual mosaic, an approach to understanding
that, in this case, involves examining, discussing, and weaving together multiple definitions,
examples, and patterns of leadership and ethics.
This class will be discussion based. While I will provide class readings and a class structure the
success of our class, the learning process, and our collective understanding of leadership and
ethics (and related concepts) this semester hinges on the participation and involvement of all
class members (teacher and students). We will engage in class discussion on multiple ethical
problems associated with leadership including social discrimination, bystander intervention, civil
disobedience, ethical dilemmas in educational leadership, moral responsibility, and many others
raised by class members throughout the semester.
Course Objectives:
Classroom Community: Students and teacher will develop a supportive learning community
based on questioning, respectful dialogue, and mutual understanding.
Writing: Students will have the opportunity to develop as better writers, more capable of clearly
expressing their ideas, beliefs, passions, and concerns in written word and through argument.
Critical Thinking: Students will have the opportunity to exercise and increase their critical
thinking skills, including developing and evaluating arguments and careful reading and analysis
of class texts.
Grading:
Class Work
Two papers: Students will be assigned two argument papers
Reading Responses: Students will submit written responses to readings as assigned
Debate: All students will participate in an organized debate on a class topic
Journal: Students will be required to maintain a journal throughout the semester on class
topics
Participation: This category includes selected course work (short reflection responses,
reading and short answer questions, and class activities) and general participation (being
present and active in class discussions)
Major Assignments
Paper 1
Paper 2
Reading Responses
Debate
Journal
Participation
Due Date
9.29.15
12.10.15
Periodically
10.29.15
Periodically
Periodically
Class Policies:
Grading Policy
Your final grade will be calculated based on the following grading scale:
A = 93 % and above
A- = 90 to 92 %.
B+ = 88 to 89 %
B = 83 to 87 %
B- = 80 to 82 %
C+ = 78 to 79 %
C = 73 to 77 %
C- = 70 to 72 %
D+ = 68 to 69 %
D = 60 to 67 %
F = 0 to 59 %
Syllabus Changes
I will make changes as necessary to this syllabus. If changes are necessitated during the term of
the course, I will immediately notify students of such changes in class and, if necessary, through
email.
Angel discussion
Community building exercise
R 8.27
Priming our intuitions on leadership What is a leader? The question of motivation
Reading: Online module Leading with Ethics (Ethics and Leadership and Leading
sections)
Week 2
T 9.1
Priming our intuitions on ethics Motivation, the descriptive, and the normative
This American Life, Superpowers
Reading: Plato, Republic, Ring of Gyges
R 9.3
Priming our intuitions on ethics The question of judgment
What can we know? What can we judge?
Reading: Jean Bethke Elshtain, Judge Not?
Week 3
T 9.8
An ethical framework Moral Literacy
Reading: Online module Ethical Leadership (sections as assigned in class)
R 9.10
An ethical framework Moral Literacy
Reading: Online module Ethical Leadership (sections as assigned in class)
Week 4
T 9.15
Central ethical issue - The question of moral and personal responsibility
Reading: Thirty-Eight Who Saw Murder Didnt Call the Police
(http://www2.southeastern.edu/Academics/Faculty/scraig/gansberg.html)
Reading: Peter Singer, Poverty, Affluence, and Morality
R 9.17
Central ethical issue Student leadership (Bystander Intervention)
Reading: Antonia Abbey, Alcohol-Related Sexual Assault: A Common Problem
Among College Students
Clip: What Would You Do?
Week 5
T 9.22
Central ethical issue Student leadership (Bystander Intervention)
Reading: Bystander intervention resources (as assigned in class)
R 9.24
Central ethical issue Student leadership (Bystander Intervention)
Reading: Affirmative Consent: Are Students Really Asking?
(http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/02/education/edlife/affirmative-consent-are-studentsreally-asking.html)
Bystander intervention resources (as assigned in class)
Section II Leadership, Ethics Education, and the University
Week 6
T 9.29
The purpose of education
Reading: bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress (Introduction and Engaged Pedagogy)
Paper 1 Due
R 10.1
The purpose of education
Reading: Robert Starratt, The Purpose of Education
Week 7
R 10.6
The purpose of education
Reading: John Dewey, Moral Principles in Education (selections)
T 10.8
The role of the university leader
Reading: Albert Yates, Virtue and Leadership: Good Leaders Must First Be Good
People
Reading: The Ethicist Who Crossed the Line (http://chronicle.com/article/TheEthicist-Who-Crossed-the/149619/)
Week 8
T 10.13
Case study on leadership, ethics, and the university Penn State
Reading: Selections from the Freeh Report
(http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/07/12/sports/ncaafootball/13pennstatedocument.html)
R 10.15
6
No class meeting
Values and Leadership Conference (http://sites.psu.edu/cslee20/)
Week 9
T 10.20
Case study on leadership, ethics, and responsibility Penn State
Reading: Michael Brub, Why I Resigned the Paterno Chair
(http://chronicle.com/article/Why-I-Resigned-the-Paterno/134944/)
R 10.22
Film: Happy Valley
Week 10
T 10.27
Film discussion
Debate preparation
R 10.29
Class Debate
Section III Questioning Leadership
Week 11
T 11.3
Who can lead? Leadership, voice, and social identity
Reading: Miranda Fricker, Selections from Epistemic Injustice
R 11.5
Children, political action, and leadership
Little Rock 9
Reading: Taylor Branch, The Childrens Miracle
Week 12
T 11.10
Children, political action, and leadership
Reading: Jean Bethke Elshtain, Political Children
R 11.12
Oppression and grassroots and indigenous leadership
Section IV - Leading and Civil Disobedience
Week 13
7
T 11.17
Reading: Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience
R 11.19
Contemporary analysis of civil disobedience
Reading: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Love, Law, and Civil Disobedience
Week 14
No classes Thanksgiving Break
Week 15
T 12.1
Contemporary analysis of civil disobedience
Black Lives Matter Movement
Reading: Nonviolence as Compliance
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/04/nonviolence-ascompliance/391640/)
R 12.4
Contemporary analysis of civil disobedience
Black Lives Matter Movement
Reading: TBD
Week 16
T 12.8
Following and leading
Reading: Eyal Press, The Price of Raising Ones Voice
R 12.10
Reading: Stanley Milgram, Selections from Obedience to Authority
Experiment clips
Paper 2 Due