ETHICS
AND PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY
1. You are the lunchtime host at a popular restaurant. The waiting list
is 30 minutes long. A customer offers you $20 to seat his party next.
Would it be ethical to accept the offer? Explain your answer.
2. How do we
know whether or not something is ethical? What does “ethical”
mean?
3. Compile
and bring to the next class a written list of five business situations
in which people must make ethical decisions. The examples can be taken
from home, school, work, TV shows or movies. For each situation, state:
a) What ethical
question was raised?
b) Do you think the answer was easy or difficult?
c) How was the question resolved?
d) How would you have resolved it?"
4. When you
accept a job, what does the employer owe you, and what do you owe the
employer?
5. What is
the obligation of a salesperson to a customer?
6. Draft a
brief code of conduct specifying the rules that employees should follow
in treating co-workers, including supervisors and subordinates, with
respect.
7. How often
to you think about whether something is right or wrong before you make
a choice? If you care about doing the right thing, does that make your
choices easier or harder?
8. How important
is it to you to be a moral and ethical person? Why?
Tina Walsh
Lake Taylor HS
Norfolk VA