Ethical Dimensions of College and University Teaching:
Understanding and Honoring the Special Relationship Between Teachers and Students

Edited by Linc. Fisch
(New Directions for Teaching and Learning, No. 66)
San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1996.

Linc. Fisch introduces this collection by arguing that while most college and university teachers know the "rules" of ethics in the academy--"it is commitment to those rules and ideals that is necessary for the ethical professoriate"--and that preparation to meet ethical dilemmas requires "an ever deeper awareness of the subtleties of application of ethical principles and an understanding of the gray areas between what is ethical and what is not ethical." No doubt he is right. In the nineties as never before, we find ourselves confronting situations which our counterparts of a generation ago would not have faced or would have simply ignored. To help meet this challenge, the collections's 13 essays address the "ethical dimensions" of our lives as teachers: "The Ethics of Teaching," by David C. Smith; "Teaching the Subject: Developmental Identities in Teaching," by Mary Burgan; "The Ethics of Student-Faculty Friendships," by Richard L. Baker, Jr.; "Between Apathy and Advocacy: Teaching and Modeling Ethical Reflection," by Karen Hanson; "Institutional Commitment to Fairness in College Teaching," by Rita Cobb Rodobaugh; "Differentiating the Related Concepts of Ethics, Morality, Law, and Justice," by Terry T. Ray; "The Ethics of Knowledge," by Clark Kerr; "Ethical Principles for College and University Teaching," by Harry Murray and others; "Making Responsible Academic and Ethical Decisions," by Charles H. Reynolds; "Intervening with Colleagues," by Patricia Keith-Spiegel and others, "Reflecting on the Ethics and Values of Our Practice," by Ronald A. Smith; "Toward More Ethical Teaching," by Linc. Fisch; and "Ethics in Teaching: Putting it Together," by Kathleen McGrory. Perhaps the most enlightening list of the responsibilities of the ethical teacher appear in "Ethical Principles for College and University Teaching," material originally disseminated by the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education:

I find myself, however, returning to Linc. Fisch's opening remarks. Knowledge and commitment to the ethics of our profession are indeed prerequisites for handling ethical dilemmas well. But it seems unlikely that the book will be read broadly by the populations that could use it the most. It will not, that is, convert anyone to the importance of ethical teaching behaviors. Instead (as my mother would say), it is "preaching to the choir": a book that will be read by the already-converted. Nonetheless, it is likely to increase our sensitivity to issues that we might not have defined as ethical ones and even to provide us with possible solutions to the problems we are already facing as teachers.

As Kathleen McGrory writes, "a basic premise of this volume is that the quality of faculty moral decision making can be improved by increased self-awareness and sensitivity to the rights of students, and by doing some `homework'" (106). In order to broaden the audience of the message, perhaps we need (as Linc. Fisch suggests) to find creative ways to confront the ethics of teaching as a faculty development issue.

Nancy Warner Barrineau
UNC at Pembroke