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An Analysis of Ethical Problems Facing Student Affairs Administrators
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March 11, 2004
A total of 580 ethical problems faced by 303 student affairs administrators were examined by category using Kitcheners ethical principles. Reports of these problems differed significantly when gender, level of experience, administrative level within the institution, and institution size were examined.
Published Online: 2004-3-11
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Working and Learning: The Role of Involvement for Employed Students
- Students' Sense of Campus Community: What it Means, and What to do About It
- Longitudinal Assessment of the Effectiveness of Environmental Management and EnforcementStrategies on College Student Substance Abuse Behaviors
- Improving the Campus Climate for Students with Disabilities Through the Use of Online Training
- Effects of Living on Campus on African American Students' Educational Gains in College
- Crisis Intervention on Campus: Current and New Approaches
- The Grass is Always Greener on the Other Side of the Fence: Making a Transition from Student Affairs Administrator to Full-Time Faculty
- Thyrsa Wealtheow Amos: The Dean of Deans
- An Analysis of Ethical Problems Facing Student Affairs Administrators
- Student Affairs Division's Integration of Student Learning Principles
- NASPA Journal, Winter 2004, Volume 41, Number 2