EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

An Imperative Responsibility in Professional Role Socialization: Addressing Incivility.

Authors

Layne, Diana; Hudgins, Tracy; Kusch, Celena E.; Lounsbury, Karen

Abstract

The study used a thematic analysis to examine student and faculty responses to two qualitative questions focused on their perceptions of the consequence of incivility and solutions that would embed civility expectations as a key element to professional role socialization in higher education. Participants included students and faculty across multiple academic programs and respondent subgroups at a regional university in the southern United States. A new adapted conceptual model using Clark's in Nursing Education Perspectives, 28(2), 93–97 (2007, revised 2020) Conceptual Model for Fostering Civility in Nursing Education and Daniel Goleman's in Emotional intelligence: Why it can matter more than IQ. Bantam Books (1995) Emotional Intelligence domains was used as the framework for this study to give meaning and context to its findings. For this group of respondents, the study found that seventy percent of faculty and students agree that incivility has the largest impact on the emotional intelligence domain of self-management, which includes negative emotional outcomes, loss of respect, negative professional and student outcomes, poor academic outcomes, attrition, and less success. Leadership in higher education will strengthen their institutions by using a relational approach centered on communication skill-building to ensure that faculty have been socialized to the importance of civil professional behavior and that stakeholders collectively explore and agree on the meaning and organizational integration of civility.

Subjects

EDUCATIONAL leadership; NURSES' attitudes; PROFESSIONAL socialization; PROFESSIONAL ethics; OCCUPATIONAL roles; EMOTIONAL intelligence

Publication

Journal of Academic Ethics, 2024, Vol 22, Issue 4, p715

ISSN

1570-1727

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s10805-024-09524-9

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved