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Showing posts with label Solved Assignment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Solved Assignment. Show all posts

Monday, August 10, 2020

Explain the relationship of ethics and education. What are the responsibilities of a teacher in this regard. Professionalism in Teaching (8612)


Q.1 Explain the relationship of ethics and education. What are the responsibilities of a teacher in this regard..

Course:: Professionalism in Teaching

Course code 8612

Level: B.Ed Solved Assignment 


Answer:


The increasing cross-national mobility of people and the transnational  communication of ideas that took place cause the educators around the world are faced   with new challenges of balancing local, national, and global norms and moral as well asethical values in the process of educating children (Gluchmanova, 2014). However,  educators are always unwilling to devote time and effort to ethics education which is  viewed as a soft course at the expense of what they view as more important courses(Power, 1991). Many scandals related to business and professional fields took place allover the world such as Enron and WorldCom which result to a widespread call to  implement corporate code of ethics (Schwartz, 2013). So there is a need to discuss on the relationship between education and ethics.


Ethics, also known as moral philosophy is defined as “…generally used  interchangeably with morality” and “…the moral principles of a particular tradition, group or individual” (Audi, 1999, p. 284). Different fields of professional have giving  different definition to ethics. In business ethics, it is define as “an area requires reasoning  and judgment based on individuals’ principles and beliefs in making choices that balance  self-interest against social welfare or claims and responsibilities” (Weiss, 1994, p.7).


However, there are three recurring themes appear in the definition  -  principles, decision making process and conduct. Different people who have different principles will make different decision while the decision made may be result to an ethical and unethical  conduct.

Education is focus on teaching humans with ethics and morality besides  development in knowledge and physical acquisition. In the philosophy of Imam Ghazali,  education is a process of teaching and used to shape an individual character (Nofal, 1993).He states that religion education enables an individual to distinguish between the true and   false, the good and bad, the right conduct and the evil doing. Education is related to  rational. A variety of education approach and programs are aimed to improve individual  thinking skills in order to produce good thinkers (Moshman, 1990). This shows a  relationship between education and ethics.  Chambliss (1987) believes that there are relationship among ethics, education and  the formation of a just community and have been central of the Western philosophical  tradition classic statement development. He argues that educational theory is a theory of  conduct rather than an applied science. It is theory of conduct, not about conduct (Giarelli,1987)


Is Ethics Necessary For Education?


There are some positive and negative arguments about the necessary of ethics  education in different professional and area. Milton Friedman (1970) explains that the  ethical duty of businessman is to maximize profits not to study ethics. The argument is  supported by David Hume who argues that the way to encourage ethical behavior is by  installing financial and legal incentives but not ethics lectures. However, Francis  Hutcheson held that human actions are best explained as motivated by sympathy, not self-interest. There is also an argument explains that ethics education is meaningless, since it is a feeling, not thinking (Hooker, 2004).

In addition, Green (1971) indicates that “professional ethics” is an excess brought  forth by the inability to take the purpose of professional practice which developed in   response to some foundation of human need whose advancement is already a moral aim(Giarelli, 1987). It shows unnecessary of ethics education in the professional study.  However, Volnei Garrafa agrees that ethics can be a vehicle for teaching and  learning processes in undergraduate and postgraduate programs within different academic  fields. He believes that ethics should be educated in school and universities; and the real  concrete problem should be experienced by students and family themselves (Garrafa,2015).



Does Education Lead To Ethical Behavior?

In other words to say this issue is more focus on the way that educator teach ethics may lead to ethical behaviour of an individual most effectively? Since there are some researchers found that ethics education improves ethical behaviour and some do not. In fact, university education is not the only factors in influencing behaviour but also  family education and friends’ behaviour. Hill, Udayasankar and Wee (2014) argued that Confucianism and Confucian ethics influence behaviour and shape culture in parts ofAsia. It is a kind of thinking which is educated in family. Religious, intellectual, aesthetic, physical and cultural educations are responsible  for  the formation of moral behavirn  students (Manea, 2014).



Education is an important factor in the ethical decision-making process which will  impact society. The more education individuals have, the better they are at making ethical  decisions. However, the type of education has little effect or no effect on ethics. An  educated individual is in a position of power, trust, respectability, and responsibility  commits an illegal act in relation to the employment, and abuses the trust and authority  normally associated with the position for personal or organizational gains (Ferrell,  Fraedrich & Ferrell, 2015). It shows that the influence of education lead to ethical behaviour is remained unclear. For an example, those such as Joseph Goebbels, Wilhelm  Frick, Hans Frank and others who are highly educated was helping While Hitler who did not have a high education to implement the Third Reich’s regime. They were no more  moral for it. While the uneducated soldiers were more often objecting to the horrific orders handed down to them (Glenn, 2010). A research showed that there are no different  in behaviour after 10 weeks of ethical courses being lectured 
(Ponemon, 1993).



Related Topics of 

Course: Professionalism in Teaching (8612) 

Part 1

Q. 1  Explain the concept of profession. Discuss teaching as profession?

Q. 2  Write in detail about professionalization of teaching profession?

Q. 3  Describe the code of professional conduct and values in teaching profession.

Q. 4  Discuss professionalism and teaching profession in Islamic teachings?

Q. 5  Critically comment on changing the role of teacher in 21st century.



Part 2


Q. 1  Explain the relationship of ethics and education. What are the responsibilities of a teacher in this regard.

Q. 2 Describe expectations and challenges of teaching profession in new millennium.

Q. 3  How social and culture context influence upon teaching profession. Comment keeping your own context in mind.

Q. 4  Examine the situation of professionalism in teacher education institutions of Pakistan. Comment with reference to your experiences?

Q. 5  Discuss ethical issues pertaining to the role of a teacher?

Saturday, January 11, 2020

CIPP Model to Evaluate Educational Administration, Management| Evaluation | Educational Leadership and Management Course Code 8605


Q.5 CIPP is considered as a comprehensive model for evaluation. How CIPP  model can be used to evaluate educational administration/management.



Topic:  | CIPP Model Evaluate Educational Administration, Management Q. CIPP is considered as a comprehensive model for evaluation.
Course: Educational Leadership and Management | 
Course Code 8605
Bachlors/Masters/M.Phil/MS  in Education
Allama Iqbal Open University
BEd Solved Assignment Course Code 8605| AIOU | 1.5 Year | 2.5 Year | 4 Year
Part . 2


Answer:


CIPP was developed by the Phi Delta Kappa Committee on Evaluation in 1971 (Smith, 1980). Stufflebeam (1971a)  describes  evaluation  according  to  the  CIPP  model  as  a “process  of delineating, obtaining and providing useful information for judging decision alternatives” (p.267). In other words, CIPP is based on providing information for decisions (Stufflebeam, 1971b).  Moreover,  Boulmetis  and  Dutwin (2005)  named  the  CIPP  model  as  the  best decisionmaking model.

Use of CIPP model in making evaluation:


Extracting actionable results from a project's results can be challenging. The CIPP models considers four factors in evaluation -- Context, Input, Process, Product -- from which it derives its name. Daniel Stufflebeam created the CIPP model in 1966 to evaluate federally funded projects and it has grown into a general evaluation method across all industries. The goal of CIPP analysis is to use the observable information about context, input and product to evaluate the efficiency of your process.

1.         Evaluate the Context in which the project was executed. Consider the effects of other projects and the budget in your division, changes within your company as a whole, the overall health of the industry as well as the national and global economy, to the extent that they may be relevant to your project's results. A new marketing strategy may be very effective but show poor results if the industry is in decline or consumer spending is down during a recession.

2.         Evaluate the Inputs to the project. Take a second look at the information you used and the assumptions you made when planning the project. Your process could be very effective but the project may have been planned with flawed or incomplete information. Also look at the raw materials put into the project, including both commodities and human capital. Evaluate whether the team that executed the project had the expertise needed to make the project succeed.

3.         Evaluate the Product, or the results, of your project. A project is not simply a success or a failure. Evaluate customer feedback on the product or service. Determine whether or not the actual product met design specifications. Compare the actual to the estimated and budgeted costs.

4.         Determine what the information from Context, Input and Product tells you about how you can improve your process. The Process component of CISS includes  identifying problems in your analysis of context, input and product and following them to the source.




Friday, January 10, 2020

BEd Course Code 8606| Role of an Individual in the Development of any Society | Citizenship Education and Community Engagement | Solved Assignment | aiou

Q. 1   Evaluate the role of an individual in the development of any society.

BEd Course Code 8606| Role of an Individual in the Development of any Society | Citizenship Education and Community Engagement  | Solved Assignment | aiou


Answer:


The human being and the group. The problem of man cannot be solved scientifically without a clear  statement  of  the  relationship  between  man  and  society,  as  seen  in  the  primary collectivity—the family, the play or instruction group, the production team and other types of formal or informal collectivity. In the family the individual abandons some of his specific features to become a member of the whole. The life of the family is related to the division of labour according to sex and age, the carrying on of husbandry, mutual assistance in everyday life, the intimate life of man and wife, the perpetuation of the race, the upbringing of thechildren and also various moral, legal and psychological relationships. The family is a crucial instrument for the development of personality. It is here that the child first becomes involved in social life, absorbs its values and standards of behaviour, its ways of thought, language and certain value orientations. It is this primary group that bears the major responsibility to society. Its first duty is to the social group, to society and humanity. Through the group the child, as he grows older, enters society. Hence the decisive role of the group. The influence of one person on another is as a rule extremely limited; the collectivity as a whole is the main educational force. Here the psychological factors are very important. It is essential that a person should feel himself part of a group at his own wish, and that the group should voluntarily accept him, take in his personality.


Everybody performs certain functions in a group. Take, for example, the production team. Here people are joined together by other interests as well as those of production; they exchange certain political, moral, aesthetic, scientific and other values. A group generates public opinion, it sharpens and polishes the mind and shapes the character and will. Through the group  a  person  rises  to  the level of a  personality,  a  conscious subject  of historical creativity. The group is the first shaper of the personality, and the group itself is shaped by society.
 The unity of man and society. A person's whole intellectual make-up bears the clear imprint ofthe life of society as a whole. All his practical activities are individual expressions of the historically formed social practice of humanity. The implements that he uses have in their form a function evolved by a society which predetermines the ways of using them. When tackling any job, we all have to take into account what has already been achieved before us. The wealth and complexity of the individual's social content are conditioned by the diversity of his links with the social whole, the degree to which the various spheres of the life of society have been assimilated and refracted in his consciousness and activity. This is why the level of individual development is an indicator of the level of development of society, and vice versa. But the individual does not dissolve into society. He retains his unique and independent individuality and makes his contribution to the social whole: just as society itself shapes human beings, so human beings shape society.


The individual is a link in the chain of the generations. His affairs are regulated not only by himself, but also by the social standards, by the collective reason or mind. The true token of individuality is the degree to which a certain individual in certain specific historical conditions has absorbed the essence of the society in which he lives.


Consider, for instance, the following historical fact. Who or what would Napoleon Bonaparte have been if there had been no French Revolution? It is difficult or perhaps even impossible to reply to this question. But one thing is quite clear—he would never have become a great general and certainly not an emperor. He himself was well aware of his debt and in his declining years said, "My son cannot replace me. I could not replace myself. I am the creature of circumstances."[1] It has long been acknowledged that great epochs give birth to great men. What tribunes of the people were lifted by the tide of events of the French Revolution.


Mirabeau, Marat, Robespierre, Danton. What young, some times even youthful talents that had  remained  dormant  among  the  people  were  raised  to  the  heights  of  revolutionary, military, and organisational activity by the Great October Socialist Revolution. It is sometimes said that society carries the individual as a river carries a boat. This is a pleasant simile, but not exact. An individual does not float with the river; he is the turbulently flowing river itself. 


The events of social life do not come about by themselves; they are made. The great and small paths of the laws of history are blazed by human effort and often at the expense ofhuman blood. The laws of history are not charted in advance by superhuman forces; they are made by people, who then submit to their authority as something that is above the individual.


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