A set of moral principles or values; principles of conduct governing an individual group.
What is ethics?
100
When we believe we are acting in an ethical manner.
What is it that force us to choose between competing values?
100
To always be open for evaluation and debate.
What is the importance of any professional code of ethics?
100
Moral reasoning the adults use to evaluate dilemnas in their lives that is dependent on abstract reasoning ability.
What is Kohlberg's theory?
100
It is a variable to consider when evaluating the rightness and wrongness of behaviors.
What is meant by cultural context?
200
A foundational value system designed to tell us what good and bad behavior is.
What is ethical standards based on?
200
One's family origin, one's culture and one's religious beliefs.
What is the value system based on?
200
A greater complexity of ethical dilemnas
What is it that human service professionals encounter than the average psychologists?
200
Professional groups operate under a professional organization that enforces ethical codes in some form.
What is the ethical code a professional organization or licensing entity operate under?
200
To determine what is ethical when making ethical/unethical decisions.
What is importance of being sensitive to differences between cultures, and genders?
300
Urges, passions, negative stereotypes, personal biases, uninformed opinions and desires.
What is it that people make decisions based on?
300
It justifies when our behavior is ethical.
What is the importance of understanding the rapport between our ethical values and our emotions?
300
Conduct business-professional & personal in a respectful & safe manner striving to respect the dignity of all persons regardless of age, gender, race and socioeconomical level.
What is it that ethical principles enable us to do?
300
A statement of an organization's fundamental purpose, commitments and goals.
What is a mission statement?
300
People base their values differently from everyone else.
What is the understanding of the nature of moral developments importance?
400
His/her professional ethics because it is a part of life.
What is one's personal ethical values necessarily tied to?
400
The perspective, culture and one's own truth.
What is our perspective of right and wrong dependent on?
400
Autonomy (free will), Beneficence (benefited the client), Nonmaleficence (intentionally harmful, illegal or just evil) , and Justice (respected the rights and dignity of all).
What is Kitchener's model 4 assumption?
400
It depends on the level of education, license and state he/she practices.
What is the ethical standards of a social worker dependent upon?
400
Normal for one culture may be abnormal for the other.
What is normal for one culture?
500
Their ethical values that is based on the realities of the world and just being human.
What is it that make good people behave "good" naturally?
500
Their values and principles.
What is the primary motivation of individuals who are emotionally unstable?
500
To be objective, professional and compassionate.
What is the ethical principles of human services wanting us to be?
500
It's the National Organization for Human Services.
What is N.O.H.S.?
500
One's culture affect achievements and reflect values.
What is one's culture affect and what does it reflect?