School Board President David Peercy would have you believe
they have not. The media is willing to
go along with it.
Judge for yourself.
With regard to trustworthiness, the new standard reads;
Students will model and promote trustworthiness …
The corresponding standard they deleted (900 words) read;
1. TRUSTWORTHINESS
When others trust us, they give us greater leeway because
they feel we don’t need monitoring to assure that we’ll meet our obligations.
They believe in us and hold us in higher esteem. That’s satisfying. At the same
time, we must constantly live up to the expectations of others and refrain from
even small lies or self-serving behavior that can quickly destroy our
relationships.
Simply refraining from deception is not enough.
Trustworthiness is the most complicated of the six core ethical values and
concerns a variety of qualities like honesty, integrity, reliability and
loyalty.
Honesty
There is no more fundamental ethical value than honesty. We
associate honesty with people of honor, and we admire and rely on those who are
honest. But honesty is a broader concept than many may realize. It involves
both communications and conduct.
Honesty in communications is expressing the truth as best we
know it and not conveying it in a way likely to mislead or deceive. There are
three dimensions:
Truthfulness.
Truthfulness is presenting the facts to the best of our knowledge. Intent is
the crucial distinction between truthfulness and truth itself. Being wrong is
not the same thing as lying, although honest mistakes can still damage trust
insofar as they may show sloppy judgment.
Sincerity.
Sincerity is genuineness, being without trickery or duplicity. It precludes all
acts, including half-truths, out-of-context statements, and even silence, that
are intended to create beliefs or leave impressions that are untrue or
misleading.
Candor. In
relationships involving legitimate expectations of trust, honesty may also
require candor, forthrightness and frankness, imposing the obligation to
volunteer information that another person needs to know.
Honesty in conduct is playing by the rules, without
stealing, cheating, fraud, subterfuge and other trickery. Cheating is a
particularly foul form of dishonesty because one not only seeks to deceive but
to take advantage of those who are not cheating. It’s a two-fer: a violation of
both trust and fairness.
Not all lies are unethical, even though all lies are
dishonest. Huh? That’s right, honesty is not an inviolate principle.
Occasionally, dishonesty is ethically justifiable, as when the police lie in
undercover operations or when one lies to criminals or terrorists to save
lives. But don’t kid yourself: occasions for ethically sanctioned lying are
rare and require serving a very high purpose indeed, such as saving a life —
not hitting a management-pleasing sales target or winning a game or avoiding a
confrontation.
Integrity
The word integrity comes from the same Latin root as “integer,” or whole
number. Like a whole number, a person of integrity is undivided and complete.
This means that the ethical person acts according to her beliefs, not according
to expediency. She is also consistent. There is no difference in the way she
makes decisions from situation to situation, her principles don’t vary at work
or at home, in public or alone.Because she must know who she is and what she values, the person of integrity takes time for self-reflection, so that the events, crises and seeming necessities of the day do not determine the course of her moral life. She stays in control. She may be courteous, even charming, but she is never duplicitous. She never demeans herself with obsequious behavior toward those she thinks might do her some good. She is trusted because you know who she is: what you see is what you get.
People without integrity are called “hypocrites” or “two-faced.”
Reliability (Promise-Keeping)
When we make promises or other commitments that create a legitimate basis
for another person to rely upon us, we undertake special moral duties. We
accept the responsibility of making all reasonable efforts to fulfill our
commitments. Because promise-keeping is such an important aspect of
trustworthiness, it is important to:- Avoid bad-faith excuses. Interpret your promises fairly and honestly. Don’t try to rationalize noncompliance.
- Avoid unwise commitments. Before making a promise consider carefully whether you are willing and likely to keep it. Think about unknown or future events that could make it difficult, undesirable or impossible. Sometimes, all we can promise is to do our best.
- Avoid unclear commitments. Be sure that when you make a promise, the other person understands what you are committing to do.
Loyalty
Some relationships — husband-wife, employer-employee, citizen-country —
create an expectation of allegiance, fidelity and devotion. Loyalty is a
responsibility to promote the interests of certain people, organizations or
affiliations. This duty goes beyond the normal obligation we all share to care
for others.Limitations to loyalty. Loyalty is a tricky thing. Friends, employers, co-workers and others may demand that we rank their interests above ethical considerations. But no one has the right to ask another to sacrifice ethical principles in the name of a special relationship. Indeed, one forfeits a claim of loyalty when he or she asks so high a price for maintaining the relationship.
Prioritizing loyalties. So many individuals and groups make loyalty claims on us that we must rank our loyalty obligations in some rational fashion. For example, it’s perfectly reasonable, and ethical, to look out for the interests of our children, parents and spouses even if we have to subordinate our obligations to other children, neighbors or co-workers in doing so.
Safeguarding confidential information. Loyalty requires us to keep some information confidential. When keeping a secret breaks the law or threatens others, however, we may have a responsibility to “blow the whistle.”
Avoiding conflicting interests. Employees and public servants have a duty to make all professional decisions on merit, unimpeded by conflicting personal interests. They owe ultimate loyalty to the public.
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