2023
DOI: 10.1002/jee.20538
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Compassion and engineering students' moral reasoning: The emotional experience of engineering ethics cases

Abstract: Background: There has been an increase in interest in emotion in engineering and science ethics education. There is also evidence that emotional content in case studies may improve students' learning and enhance awareness, understanding, and motivation concerning ethical issues. Despite these potential benefits, however, emotions' relationship to moral reasoning remains controversial, with ongoing debate as to how much and in what way emotional content impacts on moral reasoning. Furthermore, only limited empi… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The present research focuses attention to the role of dominant epistemic values in shaping the experiences of historically excluded students in teamwork pedagogies in engineering. The culture of engineering education, long characterized by its elevation of scientific objectivity, value-neutrality, depoliticization, and technical rationality, has traditionally elevated the "technical realm" of knowledge in engineering (Cech, 2012;Cech & Sherick, 2015;Kotluk & Tormey, 2023;Mejia & de Paula, 2019). However, existing research has documented how the dominant epistemic culture of the discipline is experienced inequitably by historically excluded students (Cech et al, 2017;Cedillo, 2018;McGee, 2020a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The present research focuses attention to the role of dominant epistemic values in shaping the experiences of historically excluded students in teamwork pedagogies in engineering. The culture of engineering education, long characterized by its elevation of scientific objectivity, value-neutrality, depoliticization, and technical rationality, has traditionally elevated the "technical realm" of knowledge in engineering (Cech, 2012;Cech & Sherick, 2015;Kotluk & Tormey, 2023;Mejia & de Paula, 2019). However, existing research has documented how the dominant epistemic culture of the discipline is experienced inequitably by historically excluded students (Cech et al, 2017;Cedillo, 2018;McGee, 2020a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%