Re-centering Ethical Reasoning in Life Science Using an Ethical Reasoning InstrumentTM (ERI)

Cynthia Bauerle, James Madison University, Laura Bottomley, NC State University, Carrie Hall, University of New Hampshire-Main Campus, Daniel Howard, University of New Hampshire-Main Campus, Lisette Torres-Gerald, Nebraska Wesleyan University

Summary

Our Ethical Reasoning InstrumentTM (ERI) wizard is a process instrument that provides a way to acknowledge the context for curricular development in the life sciences to include value context, ethical context, epistemology/positionality, and pedagogy, using the "Eight Key Questions" frame developed at James Madison University as a guide. The Instrument below leads course/activity designers through a series of questions that has them consider the eight questions in each of the three dimensions of student activities, assessment and pedagogy.Overview of the ERI »

ERI Wizard Design and Philosophy

Along with the "Eight Key Questions," the ERI incorporates elements of the foundational, meta, and humanistic knowledge framework. The foundational knowledge that our product will address crosses disciplinary boundaries, accounts for cultural differences, and varies by user. The product itself will extract and identify the relevant ethical framework irrespective of discipline by guiding the user to examine their own values framework.

The meta knowledge that our product will address includes collaboration and communication about how we make ethical decisions in science, problem-solve, and critically reflect on the potential consequences of those decisions. It also includes ethical behavior, reasoning, and decision-making in ways that guide learning and pedagogy.

The humanistic knowledge that our product will address includes acknowledging various epistemologies informed by our different backgrounds and social identities; understanding that science is not value-neutral; incorporating relationship-building and intentionality; and that humanistic knowledge changes over time, is dynamic, and may mean different things for different people. Users of this instrument will be able to write learning objectives about how their students will apply humanistic knowledge in their assignments and products.

Assessment

Outcomes will be assessed through a critical discourse analysis (Fairclough & Wodak, 1997; Van Dijk, 2001) of syllabi using Wizard Outcomes as thematic categories. Faculty members will also be given a survey to assess whether the ERI Wizard is valuable, easy to use, and is effective in achieving student learning outcomes. A sub-set of faculty members will be interviewed before and after course development through semi-structured interviews to get a more intimate description of their experience with using the ERI.

ERI: The Ethical Reasoning InstrumentTM

Instructions: The Ethical Reasoning Instrument (ERI) rests on the premise that the ethical reasoning practice includes eight distinct dimensions of awareness and practice. The ERI provides a way for you to approach formal course design through intentional mapping of these dimensions across the activities, assessments and pedagogy of the course. The instrument provides a formal path for you to follow to build your curricular map.

Under each wizard outcome, consider each question within the context of the course you are designing or revising. We encourage you to complete the entire instrument by responding to each question, understanding that some may be more or less relevant to your circumstance given the subject, level and curricular context for the course. You may not elect to use all eight dimensions in your course, but setting a goal of implementing two or three may be appropriate. If your response is 'Yes,' please use the space provided to describe the planned course element and reflect on how it integrates that dimension into the course. If you find that you have responded 'No' to all of the questions in an Outcome section, you may want to think about ways you could infuse that element into your course in the space provided.

1. Wizard Outcome 1 - Fairness

1a: Learning Activities

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to practice just and equitable science by considering how biological research questions are impacted by the culture, ethnicity and gender of the scientists who ask them?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include examination of how research in biology may affect ​Indigenous populations?

YES   or   NO   Does the​ course provide opportunities for students to learn about inequities in science and the consequences of ignoring inequities in the practice of science?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

1b: Learning Assessments 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge of and address inequity in science?

YES   or   NO   Are learning assessments constructed in a way to ensure equity and fairness for learners?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

1c: Pedagogy 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for the instructor to model just and equitable science?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include attention to principles of universal design of learning, including access and accommodation?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include attention to highlighting the contributions of a diverse exemplars of scientists?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

2. Wizard Outcome 2 - Outcomes

2a: Learning Activities 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to identify, reflect on, and strategize actions to achieve the best short- and long-term outcomes for all groups of science stakeholders?

YES   or   NO   Are students engaged with how possible actions balance the short and long-term outcomes, opportunity costs, cultural costs, etc. for everyone involved?

YES   or   NO   Are there life-cycle costs to be considered?

YES   or   NO   Are outcomes reversible?

YES   or   NO   Is it clear to students who benefits and how?

YES   or   NO   Are there issues of sustainability involved?

YES   or   NO   Does the course give attention to examination of examples of unintended outcomes or competing outcomes?

YES   or   NO   Do students engage with the potential of predicting the best possible short- and long-term outcomes using models, including climate models, disease transmission models and/or habitat suitability models, game-theoretic models, food production models, conservation and biodiversity practices?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

2b: Learning Assessments 

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide assessments that allow students to use data tables, visualizations, and/or academic literature to compare and contrast or predict short- and long-term outcomes and benefits?

YES   or   NO   Do the assessments created lead to accurate conclusions about student learning outcomes for all groups, including minoritized groups?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

2c: Pedagogy  

YES   or   NO   Has the instructor employed the appropriate pedagogies that allow students to consider the best possible short- and long-term outcomes in the decisions they consider?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor guide students to metacognitively analyze the outcomes at which they have arrived and decide that they have come to the best conclusion?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor model reflexive process in organizing the course to enhance the short-term and long term learning outcomes for students?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

3. Wizard Outcome 3 - Responsibilities

3a: Learning Activities 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to enact their responsibility toward their development as science literate citizens and practitioners?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to consider what duties and/or obligations apply to them as science learners and as members of scientific communities?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to consider the ethical implications of experimental design, use of animal or human subjects?

YES   or   NO   Are there opportunities for students to acknowledge their responsibility to understand the impact of research on the communities where it is performed and the long term impact of discoveries on ecosystems, communities, and society?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

3b: Learning Assessments  

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments/evaluations of student competency in identifying, describing and practicing these obligations?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments that allow students to reflect on their sense of ownership for the original work they produce as learners?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments that allow students to reflect on their understanding of the importance of considering the ethical implications of biomedical research and experimental design?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

3c: Pedagogy  

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor give students opportunities to take ownership of their learning?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor instill a sense of responsibility in students about the work they produce?  Does the instructor accept that students will make choices about the quality of work they produce?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor create learning environment that promotes accountability, collaboration, and co-construction?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

4. Wizard Outcome 4 - Character

4a: Learning activities  

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to reflect on how personal attributes and values factor into STEM practice?

YES   or   NO   Do students have opportunities to practice applying their values and experiences in evaluating the impact of science in society?

YES   or   NO   What exercises does the course provide for students to explore their ideal selves in the context of the life sciences?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to acknowledge and respect values and identities different from their own?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to weigh decisions that challenge their value systems?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

4b: Learning assessments

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments that allow students to demonstrate their character development and science identity?

YES   or   NO   Are there opportunities for students to demonstrate how they contribute personal values and attributes to their science identities and as they participate in the local learning community of the course?

YES   or   NO   Are students required to demonstrate self-reflective processes in evaluating bioscience in society?

YES   or   NO   Are there opportunities for students to demonstrate their ability to integrate multiple values into evaluation and decision making in a scientific context?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

4c: Pedagogy  

YES   or   NO   Does the course include demonstration of character development for the instructor, perhaps through adoption of some pedagogical best practice?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor demonstrate by example how to ground scientific analysis and decision making in the context of personal values?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor actively model awareness and care in acknowledging the multiplicity and intersectionality of values and identities represented in the class?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor expand opportunities for individual learners to express their values, attributes, and identities?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

5. Wizard Outcome 5 - Liberty

5a: Learning activities  

YES   or   NO   Does the course allow for the discussion of multiple perspectives on science topics?

YES   or   NO   Does the course discuss the importance of autonomy and consent in relation to scientific research and practice (e.g., IRB, tribal sovereignty)?

YES   or   NO   Does the course require students to explore the tensions between personal freedoms and scientific priorities (e.g., requiring vaccines to stop the spread of a pandemic)?

YES   or   NO   Does the course introduce issues around the role of consent in canonical bioscience examples (e.g., bodily autonomy, organ donation, experimentation in Nazi Germany, the Tuskegee syphilis experiments)?

YES   or   NO   Does the course present examples of historic and current violations of personal liberties in bioscience (e.g., gay conversion therapy, sharing of biodata)?

YES   or   NO   Does the course allow for the discussion of how science can be liberatory?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

5b: Learning Assessments

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide students with the agency to decide formats and topics of assignments? Are course assessments transparent with regards to purpose?

YES   or   NO   Are rubrics and examples provided? Can students demonstrate competence in multiple ways?

YES   or   NO   Are there cases, such as dissections, where students are allowed to choose alternative assignments if they are uncomfortable participating?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

5c: Pedagogy 

YES   or   NO   Does the course allow students to feel that they can bring their whole selves?

YES   or   NO   To what extent are students compelled to participate versus being encouraged to participate?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor bring in examples of current events in science where questions of autonomy, consent, and personal freedom are at issue?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

6. Wizard Outcome 6 - Empathy

6a: Learning Activities: 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include different ways of knowing and being that promote empathy?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to consider the issues, needs, and concerns of others, particularly marginalized groups?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide experiences where students can see and come to know different perspectives from the viewpoint of other cultures, ideologies, social and scientific identities?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for deep self-reflection and dialogue?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide experiences where students begin to understand and care about the impact that science has on humans, animals, and the environment?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to examine their own biases and assumptions?

YES   or   NO   Does the course encourage students to be curious how others view and engage with science?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

6b: Learning Assessments: 

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide assessments that challenge students to understand the perspective of others and how they feel about science?

YES   or   NO   Does the course assess how students reflect on their experiences of interacting with and understanding different perspectives from the viewpoint of other cultures, ideologies, and social identities?

YES   or   NO   Does the course assess the process by which students examine their own biases and assumptions?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

6c: Pedagogy: 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for the instructor to model empathy?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor allow for flexibility in their syllabus in terms of deadlines, accommodations, and assignment formats?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor make sure to include and discuss campus and local resources? Does the instructor allow for discussion of the affective in science?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor present information from a variety of perspectives, especially including marginalized groups?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

7. Wizard Outcome 7 - Authority

7a: Learning activities:  

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to engage with the expectations of legitimate authorities associated with the scientific issue (e.g., review boards such as IRB and IUCUC, health and safety guidance, scientific experts, government agencies, legal stakeholders, religious entities)?

YES   or   NO   Can the students express their understanding of the need for guidelines and rules (e.g., gene editing, genetically modified crops), and do they have the opportunity to practice creating guidance for group interactions (e.g., roles and expectations during group activities)?

YES   or   NO   What opportunities do the students have for creating governance within their learning communities?

YES   or   NO   Are there opportunities for students to explore the potential for human rights violations in the absence of legitimate scientific authority (e.g. forced sterilization of minoritized peoples as "experimentation")?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

7b: Learning assessments:  

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessment of students understanding of the role of authority in forming relevant regulation, laws and/or policies?

YES   or   NO   Can students articulate the necessity of authority in guiding ethical practice of science, and conversely, can they articulate the adverse outcomes that can result from deregulation of ethical scientific authority?

YES   or   NO   Is there opportunity to evaluate students' understanding of whether an authority is legitimate?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

7c: Pedagogy:  

YES   or   NO   Does ​the instructor employ pedagogical techniques that allow students to actively engage with the role of authority in promoting science knowledge and applications?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor model adherence to the rules and regulations of the classroom (i.e. as established in the syllabus) and the campus, while also allowing deliberative or discursive democracy?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

8. Wizard Outcome 8 - Rights

8a: Learning activities: 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to engage with questions, topics or controversies centered on human, animal, and legal rights with regard to scientific practice?

YES   or   NO   Does the course allow for the discussion of what rights apply, if any, in real-word examples related to issues such as the development of biotechnology, genetic editing and/or modification technologies, sustainability investments, climate change effects and mitigation, or environmental impacts?

YES   or   NO   Does the course provide opportunities for students to consider the rights of Indigenous peoples with respect to science conducted on their lands, or with resources obtained from their lands?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to explore the rights of human subjects in biomedical research?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to reflect on the rights of non-majority groups in their interactions with the science enterprise?

YES   or   NO   Does the course allow students to examine cases where the rights of different groups are in conflict?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

8b: Learning assessments: 

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge of the legal and innate rights of different societal stakeholder groups with respect to the research and applied activities of science?

YES   or   NO   Does the course involve assessments of students' knowledge or understanding of animal rights related to biological research?

YES   or   NO   Are learning assessments constructed in a way to acknowledge the rights of students?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

8c: Pedagogy: 

YES   or   NO   Does ​the instructor employ pedagogical techniques that are sensitive to the rights of students?

YES   or   NO   Does the instructor use teaching approaches that  allow students to decide whether the rights of one group were upheld or violated (e.g. enthobotanical expeditions on tribal/Indigenous lands, experimental drug testing using only majority groups, commercialized use of natural products at the cost of environmental quality)?

YES   or   NO   During labs and demonstrations, are living organisms treated with their due rights?

YES   or   NO   Do approaches to teaching highlight the rights of both the students and instructor, and demonstrate reasonable resolutions where rights may be in conflict?

If the answer to any of these questions is Yes, please describe how the course implements these elements in the space below:

If you answered No to all of these, are there ways that this focal dimension of ethic reasoning can be infused into your class? Explain:

 

Example of Translating the ERI to Another Discipline:  Engineering

Wizard Outcome 1 - Fairness

1a: Learning Activities

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for students to practice just and equitable practice of engineering by considering how engineering design solutions are impacted by the culture, ethnicity and gender of the engineers who create them?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include examination of how selected designs and/or implementations may affect Indigenous populations and other marginalized peoples (e.g., effects of red-lining)?

YES   or   NO   Does the​ course provide opportunities for students to learn about the effects of inequities in engineering design (e.g., cost, accessibility, not testing on diverse populations) and the consequences of ignoring inequities in the course of engineering practice?

1b: Learning assessments

YES   or   NO   Does the course include assessments that allow students to demonstrate their knowledge of and address inequity in the practice of engineering?

YES   or   NO   Are learning assessments constructed in a way to ensure equity and fairness for learners?

1c: Pedagogy

YES   or   NO   Does the course include opportunities for the instructor to model just and equitable engineering practice?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include attention to principles of universal design of learning, including access and accommodation?

YES   or   NO   Does the course include attention to highlighting the contributions of diverse exemplars of engineers?

Wizard Outcome 4 - Character

4a: Learning activities: 

YES   or   NO  Does the course include opportunities for students to reflect on how personal attributes and values factor into STEM practice?

YES   or   NO  Do students have opportunities to practice applying their values and experiences in evaluating the impact of engineering in society?

YES   or   NO  Does the course provide opportunities for students to engage in teamwork and then reflect on their own behavior?

YES   or   NO  Does the course provide opportunities for students to acknowledge and respect values and identities different from their own?

YES   or   NO  Does the course provide opportunities for students to weigh decisions that challenge their value systems?

4b: Learning assessments

YES   or   NO  Does the course include assessments that allow students to demonstrate their ability to act productively on teams?

YES   or   NO  Are there opportunities for students to demonstrate how they contribute personal values and attributes to their engineering identities and as they participate in the local learning community of the course?

YES   or   NO  Are students required to demonstrate self-reflective processes in evaluating engineering in society?

YES   or   NO  Are there opportunities for students to demonstrate their ability to integrate multiple values into evaluation and decision making in an engineering context?

YES   or   NO  Are students provided the opportunity and guidance to assess their teammates on dimensions of teamwork?

4c: Pedagogy 

YES   or   NO  Does the course include demonstration of character development for the instructor, perhaps through adoption of some pedagogical best practice?

YES   or   NO  Does the instructor demonstrate by example how to ground engineering analysis and decision making in the context of personal values?

YES   or   NO  Does the instructor actively model awareness and care in acknowledging the multiplicity and intersectionality of values and identities represented in the class?

YES   or   NO  Does the instructor expand opportunities for individual learners to express their values, attributes, and identities?

Wizard Outcome 7 - Authority

7a: Learning activities 

YES   or   NO  Does the course include opportunities for students to engage with the expectations of legitimate authorities associated with engineering, as appropriate (e.g., the National Society of Professional Engineers Code of Ethics, the IEEE Code of Ethics, engineering experts, government agencies, legal stakeholders, standards agencies)?

YES   or   NO  Can the students express their understanding of the need for guidelines and rules (e.g., transfer of technology, genetically modified crops), and do they have the opportunity to practice creating guidance for team interactions (e.g., roles and expectations during team projects and activities)?

YES   or   NO  What opportunities do the students have for creating governance within their learning communities?

YES   or   NO  Are there opportunities for students to explore the potential for human rights violations in the absence of legitimate authority (e.g., equitable disaster relief distribution)?

7b: Learning assessments:  

YES   or   NO  Does the course include assessment of students understanding of the role of authority in forming relevant regulation, laws and/or policies (e.g., how standards for the Internet were created)?  Can students articulate the necessity of authority in guiding ethical engineering practice, and conversely, can they articulate the adverse outcomes that can result from deregulation of authority?  Is there opportunity to evaluate students' understanding of whether an authority is legitimate (e.g., analysis of sources)?

7c: Pedagogy  

YES   or   NO  Does ​the instructor employ pedagogical techniques that allow students to actively engage with the role of authority in promoting engineering knowledge and applications (e.g., how ABET policies impact classroom content)?

YES   or   NO  Does the instructor model adherence to the rules and regulations of the classroom (i.e. as established in the syllabus) and the campus, while also allowing deliberative or discursive democracy?

 

References and Resources

The Eight Key Questions (8KQ) at James Madison University - https://www.jmu.edu/ethicalreasoning/8-key-questions.shtml

Fairclough, N. L., & Wodak, R. (1997). Critical discourse analysis. In T. A. van Dijk (Ed.), Discourse Studies: A multidisciplinary introduction Vol. 2 - Discourse as social interaction(pp. 258-284). London: Sage.

Kohlberg, L. (1976). Moral stages and moralization: The cognitive-developmental approach. In T. Likona (Ed.), Moral development and behavior. New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston.

Kohlberg, L. (1981). Essays on moral development: Moral stages and the idea of justice (Vol.1). San Francisco: Harper & Row.

Kohlberg, L. (1984). Essays on moral development: The philosophy of moral development: Moral stages and the idea of justice(Vol. 1). San Francisco: Harper & Row.

Linder, G.F., Ames, A.J., Hawk, W.J., Pyle, L.K., Fulcher, K.H., & Early, C.E. (2019). Teaching ethical reasoning: Program design and initial outcomes of Ethical Reasoning in Action, a university-wide ethical reasoning program. Teaching Ethics, Online First. doi: 10.5840/tej202081174

Mayhew, M.J., & Engberg, M.E. (2010). Diversity and moral reasoning: How negative diverse peer interactions affect the development of moral reasoning in undergraduate students. The Journal of Higher Education, 81(4), 459-488.

Moreland, C., & Leach, M.M. (2001). The relationship between Black racial identity and moral development. Journal of Black Psychology, 27(3), 255-271.

Van Dijk, T.A. (2001). Critical Discourse Analysis. In D. Tannen, D. Schiffrin, & H. Hamilton (Eds). Handbook of Discourse Analysis(pp. 352–71). New York: John Wiley & Sons.