Chapter 17
Ethical dilemmas of graduate students negotiating new roles and
responsibilities
The importance of mindful engagement, self‑care, and
reflexivity
Ethics can be understood as a set of virtues
guiding human behavior to ensure that an individual’s actions
respect and positively impact both the self and greater society. In
academic research, discussions of ethics are often associated with
ensuring that a study’s procedures affect research participants in
humane ways. In this chapter, we reflect inward and consider the
importance of applying ethical principles to the broader experience
of being graduate students in applied linguistics. We consider this
important since graduate students engage in different activities as
part of their academic and professional development, all of which
have the potential to affect themselves and others both positively
and negatively. We begin by discussing three specific challenges
graduate students face that pose ethical dilemmas. Next, we share
examples from our own experience as graduate students in the United
States, illustrating how we faced and attempted to respond to these
challenges in our practice. Finally, we offer suggestions and
highlight resources for graduate students to adopt a stance of
reflexivity as an ethical practice to engage mindfully with their
work and advocate for their own wellbeing.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Contextualizing ethics: The risks of unquestioned overwork
for graduate
students
- Ethical challenge 1: Avoiding overcommitment to writing projects
- Ethical challenge 2: Balancing and prioritizing multiple tasks
- Ethical challenge 3: Setting healthy work boundaries
- Ethics in practice: Our experiences (struggling) with multiple roles
and responsibilities
- Carlo’s experience
- Amr’s experience
- Commentary and reflection: Mindful engagement, self-care, and reflexivity as ethical
practices for graduate students
-
Notes
-
Suggested resources about graduate study and academia in
general
-
Suggested resources about graduate study in applied
linguistics
-
References
This content is being prepared for publication; it may be subject to changes.
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