The Open Ethics Journal

2009, 3 : 13-19
Published online 2009 March 06. DOI: 10.2174/1874761200903010013
Publisher ID: TOJ-3-13

Measuring the Ethical Levels of Special Education Teachers

Craig J. Rice and Carl Stein
Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, TN 37132-0001, USA

ABSTRACT

Dialogue discussing the moral role of the teacher appears in the educational literature with greater and greater frequency each year. Fenstermachers [1] states, "The teacher's conduct, at all times and in all ways, is a moral matter. For that reason alone, teaching is a profoundly moral activity (p. 133)". This statement reflects the strong sentiments being expressed in the education literature. This is the first study to examine the moral reasoning ability of special education teachers [2]. The primary finding of this research is that special education teachers have a significantly lower level of moral reasoning than the norms established for all other reported professions. The results were consistent with previous findings reporting that teachers in general have lower levels of moral reasoning ability as measured by the DIT P-Score of the Defining Issues Test than other professionals.