of the nation’s business schools now providing
some kind of training in the area (Stark, 1983).
Studies show that these schools utilize a range
of methods and materials (Paine, 1988), but most
courses are considered superficial, inadequately
structured, and not well integrated into the
business curriculum (Murray, 1987). Even with
a high number of business
ethics courses being
offered in business schools, Cavanaugh and
Chmielewski (1987) found that less than 5% of
college graduates ever take a course in ethics.
One of the main questions in the literature is:
Can ethics be taught? Those opposed to ethics
education in professional schools promote two
arguments. The first is that a person’s ethical
character is irrevocably determined by the time
one reaches adolescence, so that ethics cannot be
taught at any level of higher education (Rohatyn,
1988). The second argument asserts that even if
students can be taught ethics, it cannot be
properly taught in professional schools because
only professionals trained formally in ethics can
teach it effectively. This mode of reasoning has
been questioned in
both business and psychology
research (Rest, 1988). Kohlberg’s (1984) theory
of moral development suggests that reaching a
certain age does not equate with a certain level
of ethical development beyond which a person
cannot advance. The implication is that ethical
education can play an important role in effec-
tively enhancing moral development of individ-
uals at virtually any stage of their life. Similarly,
Erikson’s model of moral development assumes
that ethical orientation is a fluid phenomena and
that the ethical personality can go through
changes in response to specific psychological
crises (Rest, 1988).
The results of studies that have examined the
influence of business ethics instruction on
students’ ethical
attitudes are not clear cut
(Arlow, 1991; Boyd, 1981–82; Borkowski and
Ugras, 1992; Stevens, 1984; Mayer, 1988). Some
studies have found that ethics instruction sensi-
tizes business students to ethical issues (Bok,
1976), and affects behavior at the margin
(Salmans, 1987). Other empirical research has
provided evidence that ethical education can
correlate to development in moral perspectives
of students (Rest, 1988), thereby supporting the
fundamental assumptions behind Kohlberg’s and
Erikson’s models. Contrasting studies suggest that
students’ ethical attitudes are influenced more by
exposure to the large socio-cultural norms than
by education in specific disciplines, which may
have implications for business ethics instruction
(Arlow, 1991). Given these mixed results,
researchers continue to recommend that “ethics
be integrated into
the spectrum of business
courses” (Borkowski and Ugras, 1992), and that
“it would seem necessary for there to exist
mandatory student exposure to training in
general ethics . . .” (Mayer, 1988).
Summary of the literature and research questions
Although the evidence is sometimes mixed, there
are indications from the literature that differences
in ethical attitudes and perceptions may be
explained by sex of the respondents, their age
or academic status, and their exposure to ethical
education. In this context, the present study
focuses on two separate ethical dimensions. The
first dimension assesses
perceptions of current
ethical climate and the second involves an assess-
ment of perceptions of what the ideal ethical
climate should be. The study seeks to determine
whether differences in ethical perceptions exist
simultaneously on both dimensions and whether
such differences can be explained in terms of
academic classification, sex, and exposure to
ethical education in a course. An integrative
multivariate approach for assessing whether
ethical education works, and whether it works in
the same way for men and women is adopted.
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