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Knowledge is not Enough: Training for Ethical Competence

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Knowledge is not Enough: Training for Ethical Competence. Cynthia De Las Fuentes, Ph.D ... Identification important components, knowledge , skills, attitudes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Knowledge is not Enough: Training for Ethical Competence


1
Knowledge is not Enough Training for Ethical
Competence
  • Cynthia De Las Fuentes, Ph.D
  • Mary Willmuth, Ph.D
  • Catherine Yarrow, Ph.D.
  • Richard B. Weinberg, Ph.D.

APA, July 2003
2
Other Workgroup Members
  • Madonna Constantine, Ph.D.
  • Judy Hall, Ph.D.
  • Nancy Downing Hansen, Ph.D.
  • Scotty Hargrove, Ph.D.
  • Mary A. Jansen, Ph.D.
  • Chris Loftis, M.S.
  • Mona Koppel Mitnick, Esq.
  • Rudy E. Vuchinich, Ph.D.

3
Ethical Legal Competency
  • Integral to all areas of practice and all
    activities
  • Important aspect of professional development

4
Mandate of Working Group Ethics Legal
Competence
  • Identification important components, knowledge
    , skills, attitudes and values
  • Training - critical experiences
  • Assessment - across different stages

5
Knowledge
  • ethical/professional codes
  • standards guidelines
  • statutes, rules, regulations and relevant case law

6
Skills
  • Ability to recognize ethical and legal issues
  • Ability to apply knowledge and skills to practice
  • Ability to recognize and reconcile conflicts
    among relevant codes and laws

7
Skills (Contd)
  • Appropriately seeking information
  • Consulting and offering consultation
    appropriately
  • Building and participating in a collaborative,
    supportive peer network
  • Raising ethical and legal issues, assertively

8
Values/Attitudes
  • Adopting/adapting ones own ethical
    decision-making model
  • Applying the model with personal integrity and
    contextual sensitivity
  • Self-assessment/Self-awareness

9
Comment Courage and Ethical Conduct
  • Courage may be required to act ethically
  • Component of the ethics competency or general
    attribute?

10
Training General Recommendations
  • More discussion of
  • Legal issues
  • Multicultural issues
  • Culture of ethics code
  • More training in ethics for research
  • Training Modalities Milieu, modeling,
    didactics/instruction and practice/experience

11
Training Milieu, Modeling
  • Milieu
  • Training program itself must be consistent with
    the Code of Ethics
  • Modeling of ethical behavior
  • Critical
  • Must be clearly seen by trainees
  • All experiences in program should exemplify
    ethical behavior, encourage reflection and
    evaluation

12
Training Didactics
  • Introduce ethical issues early in training
  • A course in ethics is necessary but not
    sufficient
  • Have students read literature analyze their own
    ethical decision-making model why I do what I
    do
  • Teach and model self-assessment from early in
    training

13
Training Practice/experience
  • Integrate throughout training
  • Use cases or experiential activities of
    increasing complexity to continue refining
    ethical training
  • Vignettes can be useful if different
    interpretations are discussed in vivo training
    is also valuable
  • Use actual experiences as part of content for
    training in ethics

14
Progression of Training
  • Training should be progressive, through
    developmental steps
  • early training/pre-practicum
  • practicum
  • internship and post-doc
  • professional and lifelong learning
  • No agreement on specific sequence of training

15
Training Additional Recommendations
  • Encourage development of peer networks and
    consultation/study groups
  • Experiential training in supervision and
    ethical/legal issues in supervision

16
Training Other Themes
  • Normalize occurrence of ethical dilemmas as part
    of all professional activities
  • Need to see beyond codification of rules

17
Training Innovation Morality Genogram
Self-Awareness
  • Morality dimension in internship
  • how it enters into questions we ask and what we
    do
  • Self awareness for trainers and students
  • Morality genogram mapping
  • critical incidents
  • influences on moral development

Richard B. Weinberg, Ph.D.
18
Ethics Legal Competency Assessment
  • Formative vs summative role of trainers
  • usually formative activities
  • must make summative decisions
  • dual role
  • influenced by own perspective, moral history
  • Assessment mechanism
  • provide opportunity for training and growth, as
    appropriate

19
Assessment
  • Assess for different levels of competence at
    various points in training
  • Assess for ethical competence in every course
    throughout training

20
Multimodal Assessment
  • Trainees discuss their response to ethical
    dilemmas
  • In vivo assessment
  • Critical incident methodology
  • Reinforce when trainee has recognized an
    ethical/legal dilemma and acted appropriately
  • Gap analysis methodology to assess progress over
    training

21
Future DirectionsEthics Legal Competence
  • Promote a multi-modal, developmental,
    process-based model for training and assessment
    of ethics competence
  • Promote communities for ethical decision-making
  • Hold a multi-stakeholder conference on training
    and assessment for this competence
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