Monday, March 28, 2011

A breakdown of my results


My survey was based on confidence within our profession. Self assurance and belief in our ability to succeed. My results were very surprising which has caused me to doubt my opinions but the answers have encouraged me to explore this topic even more.

Most people who answered my survey were professional performers. 57.1% said they only ‘sometimes’ enjoyed there  job whilst only 42.9% said ‘yes they love there job. I predicted this result as I feel our job is very hard as you are constantly fighting to be in work. The next answer proved that as only half of the people who answered are in work.

This answer wasn’t a shocker but did make me feel a little sad as 50% of us feel we are constantly struggling for money. So not only do we have to worry about weight, technique, face, performance etc but we have to fret about financial issues to.

I asked the question “do you feel you are the best you can be at your chosen career?” not one person said yes. I wondered if people were just being modest or did they generally feel they were not the best they could be. Is that down to training or motivation?

I asked “If you had the choice (at present) to change your career would you?” it was refreshing to know that 85.7 said no they wouldn’t.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Google doc- questionnaire

Thank you to everyone who completed my survey on 'Survey Monkey' already this has encouraged me to look at different aspects of my inquiry. I had some interesting answers which I will be discussing in my next blog. 

I have created a questionnaire on Google docs and the link is below. This questionnaire is simple but please give me detailed thoughts and answers if you wish to complete it. I am giving my questionnaire to 10 friends of mine who are in the business but are not doing this course just so I can get an overall view.

You can e-mail me your answers to- staceywilson99@hotmail.co.uk

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oInpV3npguIj2aRt2xllH6YyBwmYtYkkODCBV0RUxwE/edit?hl=en&authkey=CJmi5L8C#

Can you be successful only being good?

I have created a Wiki called "Can you be successful only being good?" this links to my inquiry that I have been concentrating on - JACK OF ALL TRADES MASTER OF NONE.

The link is- http://canyoubesuccessfulonlybeinggood.wikispaces.com/

Friday, March 25, 2011

Award title ideas.

The last couple of weeks I have been racking my brain for an award title that would be in relation to my career and the path I wish to take. I was coming up with ridiously long titles and making them sound to complicated, after researching I have come to the conclusion I want a title that is simple and readily understood.

Here are just a few titles that I have been working with, I have also stated my own opinions.

Dance performance, cheorgraphy and education- I chose this to begin with as it demonstartes that I perform, cheoragraph and teach within education, this is exactly what my career is. The reason why I am not choosing this award title is because its a marathon to say and on a CV this would look alittle extreme.

Community dance education- Again I chose this title as it confirms clearly what my carrer is, however my friend said it dosn’t connect with my personality. I found this comment very interesting as it made me realise I want my award title to connect to my individuality and character.

Arts management- I like this alot. Straight to the point and effortless. One negetive comment I had from a friend was it sounds impractical, almost like I am working behind the scenes in an office. I understand what he means as I beleive my award title needs to be short but filled with energy.

After alot of discussions and research I have decided I want something dynamic, short and explanatory.

What are people’s views on “Expressive Arts Education”

Survey-Please complete

Hey,

I have prepared a survey using Survey monkey. It is called "do you feel confident in your profession?"

Be honest and enjoy!

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/TJZSRPJ

Monday, March 14, 2011

Morals,Ethics and Virtues!

I find people’s attitudes towards ethics and morals to be very interesting as everyone has their own concepts of right and wrong. I have a lot in common with my two sisters in terms of food, clothes and film’s however our principles and morals are very dissimilar which causes huge debates in my household.  There are general rules that most of us abide by like “don’t steal money that’s not yours” however there are specific moral choices that we have to make, for example “do you give money to the homeless?”

We all have different traits and qualities that create and build our character. Our behavior and thoughts are based on underlying values and inner qualities that contribute to our personality.  I believe a virtuous person is kind in their lifetime because that is there character beneath; however a person who puts on a front is not showing their true personality, not their true virtue. I have been thinking about my personal true virtues and values and how they relate to my profession. 

Generous- I sometimes buy stickers and presents for my children in my classes.

Kind/thoughtful- I am always kind and well-mannered in my classes. I reflect upon my work to try and improve for the next time to progress the classes for the children. 

Creativity- I aim to be artistic and unusual in my work.

Individualism- I try to be diverse, so I can offer something different that nobody else has.

Loyalty- I feel the people I work for can trust as I would never let them down.

Enthusiasm- I am always energetic and motivated in my work as this encourages the children to work hard.

Helpful- I always help children who are struggling to pick steps up in my dance classes.

Ambitious-I have a strong desire for success and achievement.

I have been struggling to fully connect and understand the differences between virtues, morals and ethics. I have done a few bullet points which I have found on Internet sites and these have created a better understanding.

Virtue

A virtue is a trait of character that is admired, well-liked and praiseworthy. 

Your true identity, character is more important than many other things such as rules.

It is possible that a person could obey every moral rule where they would be like a robot, whereas we need to know what the person is like, how they feel about things and what effects them, not just that they are focused on duty.

Who I should be rather than what I should do.

Virtue is an intrinsic value, coming from within, but it is impersonal.

Ethics

Ethics refers to well-founded standards of right and wrong that prescribe what humans ought to do, usually in terms of rights, obligations, benefits to society, fairness, or specific virtues. Ethics, for example, refers to those standards that impose the reasonable obligations to refrain from rape, stealing, murder, assault, slander, and fraud. Ethical standards also include those that enjoin virtues of honesty, compassion, and loyalty.


Norms for conduct that distinguish between acceptable and unacceptable behavior
The system or code of morals of a particular person, religion, group, profession, etc.

3 main theory’s of ethics that we have acknowledged on this course
Consequential Ethics

Consequential ethics: An action is ethical depending on the consequences of that action. Lying isn't wrong if the consequences that result are positive.  http://answers.yourdictionary.com/language/what-is-ethics.htmlIt seems sensible to base ethics on producing happiness and reducing unhappiness.

My own consequential ethic that I have used before. My friend asked if she had lost weight, I didn’t want to upset her as she clearly hadn’t. I said yes and she left with a smile on her face!

The most influential contributors to this theory are considered to be Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill.  They believed an action is right if it produces a much more of an increase in happiness of all affected by it than any alternative action, and wrong if it does not. This then connects to a utilitation.A utilitarian is someone who accepts the principle of utility - and is therefore concerned with maximising the value (utility) of the universe - which makes utilitarianism a consequentialist (goal-based) theory of ethics, as opposed to a deontological (rule-based) theory.


I found this situation on-line and I like it-


"A billionaire needs an organ transplant. He says that if he is given the next suitable organ he will fund 1000 hip-replacements a year for 10 years. Giving him the next available organ means Mr X, who was top of the list, will die - but it also means that thousands of people will be very happy with their new hips. Consequentialism might be used to argue that Mr X's human rights (and his and his family's happiness) should be ignored, in order to increase the overall amount of human well-being. "

Deontology
Ethical theories that maintain that the moral rightness or wrongness of an action depends on its intrinsic qualities, and not (as in consequentialism) on the nature of its consequences. Deontological ethics holds that at least some acts are morally wrong in themselves (e.g., lying, breaking a promise, punishing the innocent, murder). A deontologist might argue that lying is always wrong, regardless of any potential "good" that might come from lying.

Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/deontological-ethics#ixzz1GbVYVe3V

Immanuel Kant who argued that lying is always considered wrong, which firstly I don't agree with. Just because of your ethics you have to hurt somebody else? Deontology says that certain types of action are right or wrong. So murder is wrong however what if you accidently killed someone or you were defending yourself?  I feel
options are made for reasons, and with a purpose in mind.

Virtue ethics

A virtue ethicist would focus less on lying in any particular instance and instead consider what a decision to tell a lie or not tell a lie said about one's character and moral behavior. I feel this is the best option as one of my virtues is honesty, however sometimes I tell the odd lie to support my other vitue, kindness.

Morals
The difference between ethics and morals can seem somewhat arbitrary to many, but there is a basic, albeit subtle, difference. Morals define personal character, while ethics stress a social system in which those morals are applied. 

A good example I like is-
"Abortion is legal and therefore medically ethical, while many people find it personally immoral."
I have found the subtle difference between morals and ethics to be very hard to distinguish however after an hour of research come up with my own statement to understand.

Morals are something an individual defines as wrong, ethics is the 
distinction between what is right and what is wrong.

Your Morals-Social Responsibility Questionnaire

Hey!

I have just come across a fabulous questionnaire on Morals. There are 11 questions giving you situations and then a selection of choices you could make.

My results are below so we can compare. I guess there is no right or wrong as everybody has different opinions but it would be interesting to see what other people's outcomes were.


My results-30.5 out of 44

My Results

Your score puts you in the mature category of social reasoning and the majority of people will have scores in this range. Thinking here transcends the practicalities of one's preferences and exchanges to an emphasis upon social feeling, caring and conduct.

You take into account the consequences of actions for other people, whether for benefit or harm, as a consideration in its own right for deciding how one should act towards others. You emphasise relationships, thinking how you might feel if you were on the receiving end. Empathy is important, as well as compassion.
You are likely to expect others to conform to normally expected conduct, reflecting on "common decency" and will think of the chaos caused by laws being broken. You will value, love and respect others, and appreciate some higher values, as well as speaking of the benefits of a clean