The Moral Leader
Course Number 1562
| Professor of Mgt Practice Sandra J. Sucher |
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| Fall, 13 Sessions Paper Enrollment: Limited to 40 students per section |
| Professor of Mgt Practice Michael Wheeler |
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| Winter, 13 Sessions Paper Enrollment: Limited to 40 students per section |
Introduction
The successful leader at any level and in any arena will be presented with moral and ethical choices. This unique course is designed to encourage students to confront those fundamental moral challenges, to develop skills in moral analysis and judgment, and to come to terms with their own definition of moral leadership and how it can be translated into action. Drawing on the inspiration of major literary and historical figures such as Machiavelli, Conrad, Shackleton, and Achebe, and based upon an impressive array of literary sources, including novels, plays, history, and biography, the seminar-style setting of the course requires students to be thoroughly prepared for each session, willing to participate in rigorous analysis, continual dialogue, and intensive discussion.
Content and Objectives
The focus of this course is not on morality versus immorality, but on leadership, moral decision-making, and action. The course is comprised of three modules:
- Moral Challenge, in which students explore fundamental moral problems and the strategies used to come to terms with them;
- Moral Reasoning, in which students are introduced to methods and modes of "moral reasoning" that help in justifying, or not justifying, decisions made in complex situations.
These two modules prepare students for the final module:
- Moral Leadership, in which students confront examples of moral leadership per se, better able to learn from the positions and actions taken by people in explicit leadership roles.
In 13 sessions each two hours long, with readings in a multiplicity of settings ranging from ancient Greece to contemporary America, students learn to identify moral problems, to address them systematically, and to develop skills that aid them in their professional and personal lives.
Requirements
Sixty percent of the grade for the course is based on class participation and forty percent on a paper, roughly 15 pages in length.