This volume speaks to teacher, medical, and business education, and the education of school psychologists. Each of these fields has its own context, aims and expertise, generating distinctive ethical challenges. As such, ethics curricula cannot be uncritically transplanted from one professional context to another. Nonetheless, the arguments and analyses in this volume point to a shared concern about the role of moral respect, self-understanding, and virtue in the education of professionals. The chapters examine a wide range of topics, including empirical ethics, core concepts in professional ethics, moral agency, the ethics of ethics education, risk-taking, professional ethics as a practice with its own ethical requirements, and the tensions between the individual (client, patient, student) and the increasing generalization of professional systems. This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethics in Education.
Christopher Martin
is Assistant Professor at The University of British Columbia, Canada. He is the author of Education in a Post-Metaphysical World (2012), R.S. Peters (2013 with Stefaan Cuypers), and Questioning the Classroom (2016 with Dianne Gereluk, Bruce Maxwell, and Trevor Norris).Claudia W. Ruitenberg
is Professor in the Department of Educational Studies at The University of British Columbia, Canada. She is also Academic Director of UBC Vantage College, an enriched academic program for first-year international students. She is the author of Unlocking the World: Education in an Ethic of Hospitality (2015), co-editor of Education, Culture and Epistemological Diversity: Mapping a Disputed Terrain (2012), and editor of (inter alia) Reconceptualizing Study in Educational Discourse and Practice (Routledge, 2017).