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RESEARCH PRODUCT
“Don't try to teach me, I got nothing to learn”: Management students' perceptions of business ethics teaching
Guillermina Tormo-carbóKatarzyna KlimkiewiczVictor OltraElies Seguí-massubject
Economics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectSocial desirabilitySample (statistics)0603 philosophy ethics and religionSocial desirability biasNothingPerception0502 economics and businessBusiness ethicsBusiness and International ManagementCurriculummedia_commonMedical education05 social sciencesCognition06 humanities and the artsEthics teachingWork experienceStudents ethical perceptionsManagement studentsORGANIZACION DE EMPRESASECONOMIA FINANCIERA Y CONTABILIDAD060301 applied ethicsBusiness ethicsPsychology050203 business & managementdescription
[EN] Interest is growing towards including business ethics in university curricula, aiming at improving ethical behaviour of future managers. Extant literature has investigated the impact of ethics education on different ethics-related students' cognitive and/or behavioural outcomes, considering variables related to training programmes and students' demographic aspects. Accordingly, we aim at assessing students' understanding of business ethics issues, by focusing on the differences in students' perceptions depending on gender, age, work experience, and ethics courses taken. Testing our hypotheses on a sample of 307 management students at a Polish university, and controlling for social desirability bias, we obtained mixed and partially surprising results. We found significant differences in students' understanding of business ethics depending on their gender and age (female and older students showed more ethical inclinations), but not depending on having taken ethics courses-actually perceptions of such courses worsened after taking them. Besides, work experience was not a significant variable. Moreover, course exposure intensiveness (i.e., number of ethics courses completed), and time passed since completion of the latest course, did not confirm hypothesized effects on most of the dependent (sub)variables. These findings stimulate further questions and challenges for future research (e.g., around course design and methodology, and social/cultural/contextual issues).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-08-02 | Business Ethics: A European Review |