Our
Special Projects
Ethical
Athelete Award
With integrity surfacing as one of today's most
important issues in business and society, Deloitte &
Touche USA LLP and United Way for Southeastern Michigan
have launched a scholarship program celebrating ethics.
The Ethical Athlete Award will present
a $5,000 higher education grant to a high school senior
athlete showing exemplary behavior in facing issues
of moral, ethical or legal consequence.
The program runs Dec. 15, 2005 through Jan. 20, 2005
and culminates with an awards ceremony at an official
Super Bowl event, the 2006 Why Not Sports, Inc., Sports
Career Expo Feb. 2 at Cass Tech High School.
Understanding that you can't have a great community
or be a successful, fulfilled person without ethics
- it's the building block upon which everything
else fits - this program not only gives a wonderful
gift to deserving students, but reminds us that ethics
counts in school and life. Recent business scandals
such as Enron and their devastating impact on innocent
people serve as a wakeup call to the importance of ethics.
A 2005 survey by the Deloitte U.S. Firms and JA Worldwide
(Junior Achievement) suggests the problem has crept
from the boardroom to the classroom. The survey
found that the number of teenagers saying they would
act unethically to get ahead if there was no chance
of getting caught had dropped to 22 percent from 33
percent in 2003. That's encouraging, but
many may not keep their conviction under pressure.
More than 40 percent admitted they might act unethically
if instructed by their boss and more than a third would
likely lie to their boss to cover up a mistake.
"When students tell us they can be swayed, it's
a call for help," said Tom Dekar, vice chairman
and regional managing principal of Deloitte & Touche
USA LLP's North Central region. "School-based
programs are needed to strengthen a culture of integrity,
one that expects ethical behavior." In addition
to its support of the Ethical Athlete Award, the Deloitte
U.S. Firms are partnering with Junior Achievement in
providing an "Excellence through Ethics"
curriculum that teaches business ethics in grades 4-12
across the country.
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