A moral dilemma wherein one has to show a specific virtue or virtues

 
 
 
 
 
Each person owes a duty to himself or herself and to the world to study ethics and to engage in thoughtful debate about what is right, and what is wrong. It is this habit of thinking about and reflecting on ethics that will help you determine the right choices when faced with an ethical dilemma.
Articulate a moral dilemma wherein one has to show a specific virtue or virtues (it can be any virtue or virtues including honesty, courage, charity/generosity, compassion, etc.)
What is the moral dilemma about?
What virtue or virtues should be shown? (You are here selecting the best course of action)
Why is that virtue or those virtues to be shown?
How should the virtue or virtues be expressed, and why in that manner?
Apply Aristotle’s golden mean to the dilemma.
Tell us how the dilemma involves conflict moral duties (loyalty to community versus to self, professional versus familial duties, national or personal obligations).
The dilemma must be a situation in which a choice has to be made.
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The servant leadership approach

 
 
 
 
 
Sara is overwhelmed and struggling with her confidence as a leader. Based on your readings about the servant leadership approach, discuss the ripple effect that both examples shown could have on her team. Describe what that might look like. What characteristics and behaviors of a servant leader is Sara showing
 
 
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Critiquing Bulanda and McCrea’s 2013 article, “The Promise of an Accumulation of Care,”

 
 
 
 
 
 
Read the following:
Navarro, D. J., Foxcroft, D. R., & Faulkenberry, T. J. (2019). Learning statistics with JASP: A tutorial for psychology students and other beginners. https://learnstatswithjasp.com/
Chapter 9, “Categorical Data Analysis [PDF].”
Bulanda, J. J., & McCrea, K. T. (2013). The promise of an accumulation of care: Disadvantaged African-American youths’ perspectives about what makes an after school program meaningful. Child & Adolescent Social Work Journal, 30(2), 95–118.
Pell Institute. (n.d.). Analyze qualitative data. http://toolkit.pellinstitute.org/evaluation-guide/analyze/analyze-qualitative-data/
For this discussion:
Critique Bulanda and McCrea’s 2013 article, “The Promise of an Accumulation of Care,” which uses a qualitative program evaluation model.
What are the strengths of the design?
What are weaknesses or limitations to the methodology, analysis, and conclusions drawn from the data?
How would you recommend strengthening the design?
Apply concepts of qualitative research to the program evaluation design that you started in the previous discussion posts based on a previous or current work, internship, or volunteer experience.
How would you collect qualitative data and analyze it?
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Lago and his plans

 
 
 
 
 
“What do we learn about Iago and his plans through his soliloquies in Shakespeare’s Othello? How does the descriptive language he uses effect our understanding of Iago and his motivations?”
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