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Corporate Scandals Revive Interest in Ethics Courses at US Business Schools
publisher: VOA News
Author: Maura Jane Farrelly
Posted: 2002-07-28

Washington - The recent business scandals at a number of American corporations, 
including Enron and
WorldCom, have caused accounting experts and business executives in other countries to 
start seriously
questioning American accounting practices. Those practices have been held up by 
business schools in the
United States as a model for countries looking to develop and expand their capital 
markets. But experts in the
United Kingdom and Russia are now suggesting that model may be flawed. In spite of the 
criticism, American
schools have not begun to rethink the way they teach accounting. But some of them have 
begun to rethink
the way they prepare their students to deal with the ethical dilemmas that many people 
say are inherent in
capitalism. Five years ago, Howard Frank left his job with the U.S. Defense 
Department, where he managed
a $300 million budget, to become the Dean of the University of Maryland's School of 
Business. Before he
worked for the government, Dr. Frank managed a major American corporation. He says so 
far, none of the
executives being investigated for improper and illegal behavior have graduated from 
the University of
Maryland. Nevertheless, Dr. Frank points out their behavior reflects badly on all 
American corporations and
business schools. "I can tell you from a personal point of view, I find it deeply 
embarrassing," he said.
"Because the organizations that I've always been associated have been, you know, 
tremendously ethical.
We teach it, we practice it, and somehow it goes wrong anyway." Indeed, it does go 
wrong anyway. Enron
president Jeffrey Skilling, who's currently being investigated by the United States' 
government about his role
in Enron's collapse, graduated from Harvard Business School, which has been 
integrating ethical discussions
into its various MBA classes since the late 1970s. Since 1988, Harvard business 
students have had to take a
three- week mini class that specifically explores ethical dilemmas in business. But 
the students aren't actually
required to take a semester-long course devoted entirely to business ethics. School 
officials say they're
considering such a requirement, but Harvard isn't alone in not having one right now. 
Most business schools in
America don't require semester-long courses in ethics, and for Howard Frank that's a 
bad idea. He notes at
the University of Maryland, all MBA students are required to take an ethics course 
before they graduate and
to visit a so-called "white collar" prison, to meet with business executives who've 
been convicted of
corruption. "These are some quite sobering experiences for these students," he said. 
"And they would come
back very shaken, because they weren't dealing with the type of people you think of as 
criminals. You're
dealing with people who look very normal, who started with very normal careers, and 
then who edged over
the line, and all of a sudden, they're in jail." Like Harvard, George Washington 
University in Washington, D.C.
is beginning to rethink the way it deals with the issue of ethics. Faculty members 
have resurrected a course
on ethics that was dropped a few years ago, because very few students chose to take 
it. Officials say the
low enrollment may have been because many students are reimbursed by employers for the 
cost of MBA
classes, and employers weren't willing to pay for non-required courses in ethics. The 
revived course still won't
be a requirement, but Jeff Lenn, who taught the earlier course and chairs the school's 
business curriculum
committee, says bringing it back is a step in the right direction. Dr. Lenn says hopes 
to convince students that
ethical behavior is just as important to business as mathematical and research skills 
are. He points out that
American corporations depend on investments for their capital, and says people won't 
invest in corporations,
if they don't feel they can trust executives. "Business itself is built on a 
philosophy that self-interest is OK,"
he said. "And once you elevate self-interest into a position of prominence, it can 
lead to greed. The system
itself will only work if there's a limitation. So if I pursue my self interest to the 
point that I deny you the
pursuit of self interest, then our system simply doesn't work." But while no one is 
suggesting that ethical
discussions are unimportant in business school, some business professors believe it's 
impossible to teach MBA
students to engage in ethical behavior. Patrick Rogers, who teaches at North Carolina 
Agricultural and
Technical College, says schools shouldn't and can't be held responsible for scandals 
like the ones making
headlines now. "There are just bad people sometimes that make really bad decisions," 
he said. "There are
people that are just simply self- interested. And to take a corporate executive who's 
fifty-five years old, who
maybe wrapped up and finished their MBA twenty-five years ago, and to suggest that had 
Harvard School of
Business done a better job of teaching corporate ethics, they wouldn't have made these 
lousy, stinking
decisions, just doesn't seem very logical to me at all." Harvard officials say they 
agree with that assessment.
But they are still considering making some changes in their ethics curriculum. For his 
part, Jeff Lenn of George
Washington University says he's looking forward to seeing whether, in view of the 
scandals, there will be
more interest this year than there has been in the past in a non- required course in 
ethics.

Copyright 2002 (Middle East News Online). This news item is distributed via Middle 
East News Online
(MiddleEastWire.com). For information about the content or for permission to 
redistribute, publish or use for
broadcast, contact our syndication department
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