Two Rights and a Wrong: How Values, Critical Thinking, and Bias Affect Our Efforts to Lead Ethically
Dr. Arthur Gibb, III
CDR, U.S. Navy (Ret)
Tulsa
Downtown DoubleTree Hotel
616 W 7th St
Thursday, September 26th
11:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Premium Members: Free for the number of pre-paid registrants included in membership
Members: $50
Non-Members: $60
Menu
Apple Roasted Pork Loin
Mashed Potatoes
Green Beans
Chocolate Mousse with Amaretto Cream OR Carrot Cake
CPE Details:
1. Instruction Delivery Method: Group Live Instruction
2. Prerequisites: None
3. Category: Behavioral Ethics (Non-Technical)
4. Attendance requirement: 50-minute presentation
5. Refund or cancellation policy: refunds not available after event
6. Complaint resolution policy: email mary@okethics.com with concerns
7. Advanced preparation: required (look for details in the confirmation email)
Content reviewer: Executive Director & CPE Coordinator
Program Description:
Art will lead us in an interactive examination of how our values can bias our thinking in ways that undermine our efforts to be ethical leaders.
Key Takeaways:
Our values are often at the core of our identity, and they are vital to our ability to make ethical decisions. However, without self reflection and critical thinking, they can also be the source of unfair judgement and unconscious bias, which can undermine our efforts to be ethical leaders and to create an empowering work environment for our people.
About the Speaker:
Art is a twenty-eight year Navy veteran who spent the first half of his career as an aviator and the latter half as a pseudo-academic. He is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, and holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Masters in National Security Studies from Georgetown University. Art taught at the Naval Academy for over 10 years, first as the Associate Chair of the Political Science Department, and later as a Permanent Military Professor of Leadership and Ethics and Chair of the Leader Development and Research Department. He taught courses in American Government, U.S. National Security Policy, Leadership, and Ethics, and directed the institution’s Experiential Leader Development programs, including the flagship Gettysburg Leadership Encounter for Brigade leaders. He has published articles and essays on the U.S. military mission in Afghanistan, organizational change, and leadership development, and edited the textbook for the Academy’s first-year leadership course. He has presented on ethical leadership to organizations as diverse as Naval Sea Systems Command, Maryland World Class Consortia, and OK Ethics. Art lives near Annapolis with his wife, three teenagers, and their dog, and coaches people to financial success as a financial advisor with First Command Financial Services. He continues to teach Ethics at the Academy as an Adjunct Professor and is a Senior Fellow and Mentor with the Severn Leadership Group.