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Building the ethical enterprise

Building the ethical enterprise

By:  Greg Enright  On: 13 Dec 2007 For: IT World Canada Creator

Finding the answers to an executive’s toughest questions starts with perfecting the art of good communication, says one Waterloo professor.

In a course called IT and Society, for instance, Ball tries to get students to see the complexity of their work environments and the need to look at things carefully from many points of view. He believes that universities should be doing a better job of promoting this way of thinking.

“We know from research that poor communication skills — listening, reading, writing, speaking — are collectively the number one cause for early delay in career promotion,” says Ball. “No university is driven by that research. Another major cause we have from research is a lack of empathy and understanding of other people’s points of view. We don’t promote an understanding of what others can do and respect for them.”

It seems that Ball’s unique approach has opened the eyes of many of his students. “One wrote to me that they were ashamed that they were going to graduate that year because they had never had any courses that dealt with (helping) end users,” Ball says. “He told me he was going to try to learn more about them.”

Part of a pupil’s curriculum involves a work term, where they can get some hands-on experience in their chosen field. Ball urges them to view these as opportunities to put what communications skills they have learned in the classroom to use.

“The students have really good experiences from their work terms and I try to get them to reflect what went on in them. The theory is they learn all the good stuff on their work terms. Well, if you work for four months for a jerk of a boss, you learn how to be a jerk.”

Ball encourages an open-minded approach to learning, one which is inclusive of all people a student may come across in their career, whether they are an engineer or a manual labourer. All he has to do is relate some of his own experiences to prove that such an outlook pays off in the end.

He said, for instance, that one of the nicest compliments he received on his book about the Canadian Niagara Power Company came from one of the outfit’s labourers.

“I was in the their headquarters in Fort Erie, and a guy came up to me — he hadn’t shaved in a week, his pants and jacket hadn’t passed detergent since they were born — and he said to me, ‘Dr. Ball, I was reading your book and you really do understand how we work. You know that we only have one thing on our mind when the power is out: getting it back on for our friends.’

“I thought, ‘Oh my god, it’s worked.”










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Greg Enright Greg Enright is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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