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Practicing a Professional Ethic: Leading for Students’ Best Interests
by
Frick, William C.
in
Administrator Attitudes
/ Administrator Responsibility
/ Administrators
/ Best interests
/ Children
/ Decision Making
/ Educational administration
/ Educational research
/ Ethical instruction
/ Ethics
/ High school students
/ High schools
/ Injunctions
/ Leadership
/ Morality
/ Phenomenology
/ Principals
/ Professional ethics
/ Research methodology
/ Respect
/ Rules
/ School administration
/ School principals
/ Secondary school students
/ Secondary Schools
/ Student Needs
/ Students
/ Vignettes
2011
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Practicing a Professional Ethic: Leading for Students’ Best Interests
by
Frick, William C.
in
Administrator Attitudes
/ Administrator Responsibility
/ Administrators
/ Best interests
/ Children
/ Decision Making
/ Educational administration
/ Educational research
/ Ethical instruction
/ Ethics
/ High school students
/ High schools
/ Injunctions
/ Leadership
/ Morality
/ Phenomenology
/ Principals
/ Professional ethics
/ Research methodology
/ Respect
/ Rules
/ School administration
/ School principals
/ Secondary school students
/ Secondary Schools
/ Student Needs
/ Students
/ Vignettes
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
Practicing a Professional Ethic: Leading for Students’ Best Interests
by
Frick, William C.
in
Administrator Attitudes
/ Administrator Responsibility
/ Administrators
/ Best interests
/ Children
/ Decision Making
/ Educational administration
/ Educational research
/ Ethical instruction
/ Ethics
/ High school students
/ High schools
/ Injunctions
/ Leadership
/ Morality
/ Phenomenology
/ Principals
/ Professional ethics
/ Research methodology
/ Respect
/ Rules
/ School administration
/ School principals
/ Secondary school students
/ Secondary Schools
/ Student Needs
/ Students
/ Vignettes
2011
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Practicing a Professional Ethic: Leading for Students’ Best Interests
Journal Article
Practicing a Professional Ethic: Leading for Students’ Best Interests
2011
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Overview
This research examined secondary administrators’ perspectives about the expression “the best interests of the student.” Principals’ intimate reflections provided empirical insights into what they mean when they use the expression, “the best interests of the student” and whether such a common catch phrase could provide ethical guidance. A modified phenomenological research method suited for an educational research context was used to capture administrators’ perspectives and experiences. Results challenge the theoretical notion that the expression, “serve the best interests of the student” is, or should be, used in some primary, rule-based first order manner by administrators to inform their ethical decision making. Ethical judgment was more complicated and contextually defined than following a fundamental professional injunction, but the expression resonated with administrators, typifying dispositions that promote moral practice. Results and interpretations bring conceptual clarification to the moral leadership construct “serve the best interests of the student.”
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