The Ethics Interview: Connecting Students with Professionals

Author(s):  
Larita J. Killian ◽  
Fabiola Monje-Cueto ◽  
Marsha Huber ◽  
Christopher Brandon

Professional engagement helps students develop professional judgment, connect their coursework to the “real world,” and explore accounting-related careers.  Internships often provide a route to these benefits, but some students cannot complete internships.  The Pathways Commission calls for new, creative approaches to professional engagement.  In the ethics interview exercise, students engage with professionals for a single interview.  Following the intentional learning model, students complete activities before and after the interview.  They select the interviewee, prepare questions about ethics and topics of personal interest, organize and conduct the interview, and reflect on the experience.  We implemented the exercise in different accounting courses at universities in the United States and Bolivia, using both face-to-face and virtual interviews.  We applied principles of phenomenology for assessment.  Results indicate the exercise helps students experience the benefits of professional engagement.  The exercise requires little modification to existing courses and can be modified to support varied learning goals.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gremil Alessandro Naz

<p>This paper examines the changes in Filipino immigrants’ perceptions about themselves and of Americans before and after coming to the United States. Filipinos have a general perception of themselves as an ethnic group. They also have perceptions about Americans whose media products regularly reach the Philippines. Eleven Filipinos who have permanently migrated to the US were interviewed about their perceptions of Filipinos and Americans. Before coming to the US, they saw themselves as hardworking, family-oriented, poor, shy, corrupt, proud, adaptable, fatalistic, humble, adventurous, persevering, gossipmonger, and happy. They described Americans as rich, arrogant, educated, workaholic, proud, powerful, spoiled, helpful, boastful, materialistic, individualistic, talented, domineering, friendly, accommodating, helpful, clean, and kind. Most of the respondents changed their perceptions of Filipinos and of Americans after coming to the US. They now view Filipinos as having acquired American values or “Americanized.” On the other hand, they stopped perceiving Americans as a homogenous group possessing the same values after they got into direct contact with them. The findings validate social perception and appraisal theory, and symbolic interaction theory.</p>


Drug Safety ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 447-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasser Albogami ◽  
Amir Sarayani ◽  
Juan M. Hincapie-Castillo ◽  
Almut G. Winterstein

2021 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. S103
Author(s):  
D. Beachler ◽  
F. Lamy ◽  
F. Kolitsopoulos ◽  
J. Dinh ◽  
A. Papazian ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Lindsay K. Admon ◽  
Vanessa K. Dalton ◽  
Giselle E. Kolenic ◽  
Susan L. Ettner ◽  
Anca Tilea ◽  
...  

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