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Educators

Engaging Opportunities

High School Ethics Education Workshops

Photograph of a computer monitor, cup of tea, stack of books and potted plant sitting on a desk in front of a blurry window.

Moral reasoning is key to a well-rounded high school education. Our workshops teach students to develop their skills in ethical decision-making using a case-study approach. Students will walk away with tools that they can use to reason and talk through complicated moral dilemmas. Each session will introduce students to six ethical frameworks. Using a combination of small-group discussion and personal reflection, students will learn how to better understand not only some of the major ideas in the field of ethics, but also their own values and the values of their classmates.

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Creative Approaches

Philosophy at the Virtual Art Museum

Philosophy at the Virtual Art Museum fosters philosophical discussions using works of art from genres like landscape or portraiture and styles of art like abstraction. The questions for each work of art will spark discussion on issues in a variety of different philosophical areas, such as the philosophy of mind and ethics as well as the philosophy of art. Each artwork lesson can be easily shared and printed for classroom use.

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Our Mission
Resources for Educators
High School Ethics Bowl
A group of campers exploring the green-treed Nature Park.

Sharing stories, understanding values

The world children and adolescents face today is full of divisiveness and moral uncertainty. We believe that by equipping students with the skills to talk about their own values, civilly engage in dialogue with their peers and recognize moral

issues when they arise, we can empower young people to live examined, fulfilled lives. Our K-12 programming harnesses the power of narrative to create impactful content that resonates with students and educators.

A teacher on a chair in a blue camp shirt, reads Last Stop On Market to a group of 7 students sitting on the floor, looking at the book. Another teacher, in a matching blue shirt, looks on from behind the students.

Resources for Educators

The Prindle Institute for Ethics wants to serve educators with our content and educational resources. Whether you’re a Putnam County

fifth grade teacher or a professor in California, we’ve got the resources you need to engage your students with ethics.

A group of high school students lean into one another around a table to discuss their ethics bowl case.

We love ethics bowl

The Prindle Institute loves ethics bowl so much we host two huge high school competitions every year! We think ethics bowl is a fantastic teaching tool because unlike typical debate competitions, the judging

criterion focuses more on key elements of constructing a well-reasoned argument in a civil manner. We’re the home of the annual Indiana High School Ethics Bowl competition and each summer, we also host an invitational for the nation’s top high school ethics bowl teams.

Castle Arts

Ethics Bowl

Educational Resources

The Prindle Post in the classroom

The Prindle Post is the Prindle Institute’s online source for pieces that examine and explain the ethical dimensions of current events and culture. The articles are written for a general audience that includes high schoolers, college students and life-long learners. If you are an educator interested in incorporating The Prindle Post in your classroom, you can request free PDF copies of The Prindle Post workbook for use in your classroom by contacting Jeff Dunn (jeffreydunn@depauw.edu).
Each print edition comes with a free set of classroom activities and questions for each article.

More educational materials available!

Express C.A.M.P.

Young children face an increasingly divisive and divided world, where they often lack the models and tools they need for respectful disagreement and positive dialogue. Express C.A.M.P. (Character, Attitude, Morals, Perspective) is a week-long summer camp led by local Putnam County K-5 educators and college-aged counselors that’s designed to teach first- through fifth-grade children how to actively engage with others who might have different views, while also encouraging them to express and develop their own values.

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ADDRESS

2961 W County Road 225 S
Greencastle, IN 46135
765.658.5857

 

DIRECTIONS

BUILDING HOURS

Monday-Friday: 8AM-5PM
Saturday-Sunday: Closed

December 23 - January 1: Closed