Donahue Center Event Explores Everyday Ethical Decisions and Dilemmas

Two smiling young women in matching teal T-shirts stand with their hands on their hips in front of a poster board in a room. Image by Ed Brennen
Business students Iniya Poovannan, left, and Emma Hiltz helped run the "Wheel of Ethics" station at the recent Ethics Fest, hosted by the Donahue Center for Business Ethics & Social Responsibility.

11/19/2024
By Ed Brennen

Earlier this year, a 35-year-old junior banker at Bank of America 聽after putting in several 100-hour workweeks. A subsequent Wall Street Journal found that bank managers instructed employees to underreport their hours to avoid scrutiny from human resources, prompting to crack down on the practice.

Work-life balance and self-care were among the topics that nearly 300 students pondered at 51视频鈥檚 Ethics Fest, hosted recently by the Donahue Center for Business Ethics & Social Responsibility.

鈥淪ometimes self-care is put on the back burner,鈥 said Master of Public Health student Shakira Fedna 鈥23, who represented the Office of Student Life & Well-being at a table on the ethics of self-care.聽

Fedna wants to become a physician, another profession with demanding hours, so she asked students a question that she often thinks about: 鈥淲hat are the ethics of when you are supposed to advocate for your own self-care and well-being?鈥

A young man in a brown hoodie walks with two hockey sticks over his shoulders while three people look on. Image by Ed Brennen
An Ethics Fest participant tries to walk across a hockey stick while balancing weights hanging from two more hockey sticks over his shoulders at a station on work-life balance.
Designed to get students thinking about how ethics and social responsibility intersect with their everyday lives, this year鈥檚 Ethics Fest featured 18 鈥渆ngagement stations鈥 run by a variety of campus centers, faculty researchers, staff and students. Topics ranged from job searching and sustainability to higher education marketing and real estate.

鈥淚 thought it was really cool,鈥 senior business major Chris Osgood said after collecting enough stickers in his Ethics Fest passport to receive a free T-shirt. 鈥淚t鈥檚 good to understand how certain situations can have a long-lasting impact on other people.鈥

Sophomores Kaylee Kalagher (criminal justice) and Jordan Kelley (business) heard about the event from their business law professor, Michelle Veilleux. They enjoyed learning about universal design from Disability Services staff members, who showed students pictures of building entrances and asked them to identify accessibility issues.聽聽

鈥淚t made you think,鈥 Kalagher said.

Three young women pose for a photo while holding Ethics Fest passports in a large room. Image by Ed Brennen
A group of students hold up their Ethics Fest passports at University Crossing's Moloney Hall.
Senior business major Esther Rosario, who is president of the student chapter of the Association of Latino Professionals for America, ran a station on identifying microaggressions, particularly those aimed at members of the Latino community.聽

鈥淲hat do you do if someone in the workplace says, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e so professional. I didn鈥檛 expect you to be so articulate鈥?鈥 Rosario said. 鈥淎 lot of Latin Americans I know will let it slide, but others will try to make it a point to educate people. That鈥檚 a practice we should try to encourage.鈥

Jos茅 Godinez Gonzalez, an associate professor of management in the Manning School of Business, spoke to students about his research on companies that follow ethical standards even in areas where it鈥檚 not required by law.聽

鈥淭he purpose of business is to make money, but if you have goodwill and people recognize you for having a good brand, it鈥檚 a differentiation,鈥 he said, citing Patagonia and Ben & Jerry鈥檚 as examples.聽

A young woman with long dark hair in a blue shirt talks to three people at a table in a large room. Image by Ed Brennen
Senior business major Esther Rosario, left, runs an Ethics Fest station on microaggressions.
At the 鈥淲heel of Ethics鈥 station, students learned how children are introduced to gambling at an early age when they are encouraged to pay for upgrades that help them to win in video games.

鈥淭hese microtransactions target children, and we鈥檙e trying to spread awareness about the issue,鈥 said Iniya Poovannan, a sophomore business major from Westford, Massachusetts.

Poovannan and a group of fellow students came up with the topic in their Professional Communications class with Deborah Casey, an associate teaching professor of marketing, entrepreneurship and innovation.聽

Another team from Casey鈥檚 class ran a station on work-life balance, where students had to walk across a beam while carrying bean bags (representing various responsibilities) hanging from hockey sticks over their shoulders.

A woman with glasses holds a T-shirt while talking to a woman as a young man looks on. Image by Ed Brennen
Chancellor Julie Chen, left, chats with Donahue Center Co-Director Elissa Magnant while stopping by Ethics Fest at University Crossing.
鈥淵ou might have to give up certain things in your personal life for things that are expected of your job, which can create an ethical dilemma,鈥 said sophomore business major Deeyana Touserkani.聽

More than 60 students from both sections of Casey鈥檚 Professional Communications course helped run Ethics Fest once again this year as a way to get hands-on experience with event management.

鈥淏eing able to run this and talk to people helps build up our confidence,鈥 said Mathew Bevillard, a first-year business major and Marine Corps veteran from Lowell.

Donahue Center Co-Directors Elissa Magnant and Erica Steckler were happy to see students involved on so many levels with the event.

鈥淚 love seeing the students come in and get excited about ethics topics,鈥 Steckler said. 鈥淭hey may not even necessarily be aware of how ethics relate to an industry or field, and they come out of here with a much broader perspective.鈥

The event was supported by the Demoulas supermarket chain, whose ties with the Donahue Center go back to its launch in 2017.

鈥淲e鈥檙e so grateful for their support,鈥 Magnant said.