Course Learning Module in Ethics
Course Learning Module in Ethics
#WoWBiPSU 2.0
Prepared:
DR. NORBERTO J. CAMARINES, JR.
Assistant Professor IV
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
APPROVAL SHEET/CERTIFICATION
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Title Page 1
Approval Sheet 2
Table of Contents 3
#WoWBiPSU 2.0 4
BiPSU Vision 4
BiPSU Mission 4
BiPSU Core Values 4
Course Module Overview 5
Purpose of Course Module 5
Course Module Guide 5
Course Module Outcomes 6
Course Module Learning Outcomes 6
Course Module Requirements 6
Course Module Policy 7
Course Module Assessments 8
Course Module Assessment Tools 8
Resources and Tools 8
Why it matters 9
Course Suggested Readings 9
Course Module Weekly Breakdown 10
Course Module No. and Title 13
1 Foundation of Ethics in Tourism Management 13
2 Major Ethical Theories in Tourism Management 16
3 Moral Decision-Making Models in Tourism Management 19
4 Global Code of Ethics for Tourism (GCET) 22
5 Articles 1 – 3 of the Global Code of Ethics for Tourism (GCET) 25
6 Stakeholder Engagement & Community Ethics 28
7 Sustainable & Responsible Tourism 32
8 Article 9 of the Global Code of Ethics for Tourism (GCET) 36
9 Ethical Marketing & Visitor Communication 40
10 Conservation & Cultural Heritage Ethics 43
11 Leadership & Personal Ethical Reflexivity 47
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
#WoWBiPSU 2.0
BiPSU VISION
BiPSU MISSION
To provide quality and relevant instruction, research, and extension services for
the empowerment and development of our people.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Module 12. Module 12. Ethical Use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Tourism
Management
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🎯 Course Policy
Capacity: 40 students only
Teaching strategy: BiPSU using blended learning model
Health Issues. Write an excuse letter to your professor
Attend the class on-time.
Submit course requirements on or before due date
2 late equivalent to 1 absent
Unexcused absences are based on the student handbook of the university (10%
of the number of hours (54hours) in a semester.
If student absent during major examinations (midterm & finals) he/she is
automatically failed unless he/she has valid reasons.
No. of Description
Absences
1 Call the attention of the student to explain why he/she was
absent
2 Inform the parents for their absences
3–4 Report to the guidance officer for immediate action and
student provide promissory note for readmission of the class
5 Dropped the student
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Depth of analysis
Proposed solutions
Presentation and
communication skills
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🌱 Why It Matters
Ethics in tourism builds trust with communities, fosters sustainable development,
enhances destination reputation, and ensures long-term viability. Sustainable and
ethical practices contribute to environmental protection, cultural respect, equitable
economies, and stakeholder well-being
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ero.com+2.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Questions:
1. Which values are compromised?
2. Who is impacted?
3. Propose ethically-aligned alternatives.
Format: Breakout groups, then whole-class sharing.
🧾 Summary
Review key concepts: ethics vs morality, core principles, and common dilemmas.
Highlight scenario insights: how chosen principles guided solutions.
Connect to broader frameworks like Global Code of Ethics for Tourism (GCET)
Articles 1–3 studocu.com+1coursehero.com+1.
✅ Assessment
A. Quiz (Formative)
10 items: definitions (e.g., “morality vs ethics”), principles matching, and
scenario-based multiple-choice questions.
B. Scenario Write-Up (Summative)
Task: Choose an ethical scenario in tourism, describe:
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 2, focused on major ethical theories relevant to tourism management. This
would help you to have a good and better understanding by applying theories in all the
situations in the workplace.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Learning Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧾 Summary
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om+1reddit.com+1.
Highlight that most real-world tourism ethics require a blended or situational
approach.
✅ Assessment
Quiz (Formative)
Short questions: define each theory, identify its focus (consequence, duty,
character).
Multiple choice: match theory to scenario (e.g., “It is wrong regardless of
benefit”—Deontology).
Reflection Assignment (Summative)
Choose a real or fictional tourism ethical challenge (300–400 words).
Structure:
1. Describe context and stakeholders.
2. Analyze using two theories.
3. Reflect on which theory guided you—and why—and what ethical action
you would take.
o Use at least one citation from the theories overview.
Introduction
The module 3, focused on moral decision-making applying various decision-making
models in tourism-related ethical dilemmas. These models help students to become a
great decision-maker in various situations in the tourism industry.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Learning Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Best-use Tourism
Model Strengths Weaknesses
Context
Follow-up prompt:
Which model aligns with your personal decision style—and why?
How could combining steps improve tourism ethics?
🧾 Summary
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
✅ Assessment
A. Formative Quiz
Match definitions to models.
Identify correct next step in incomplete process.
MCQ: “Which model explicitly includes stakeholder consequences?” (Hunt–Vitell)
B. Structured Reflection (300–400 words)
Select one tourism ethical scenario (real or imagined).
Apply two models step-by-step.
Compare outcomes and decision rationale.
Reflect on which model(s) you would use in your future professional role—and
why.
Introduction
The module 4, focused on the overview of global code of ethics for tourism. This would
help you to guide and analyze real-world tourism scenarios applying relevant and useful
global code of ethics in tourism industry.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Learning Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧾 Summary
✅ Assessment
Quiz (Formative):
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 5, focused on articles 1 to 3 of the global code of ethics for tourism. These
articles help you to understand and implement better the tourism when it comes to
planning and operations.
🎯 Learning Objectives
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧩 Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Assign mixed-role teams (tour operator, community leader, government, tourist) and a
complex dilemma. In a structured debate, refer explicitly to Articles 1–3 and argue how
they support or conflict in decision-making.
🧾 Summary
Article 1 champions respect for cultural diversity, legal norms, and reciprocal
hospitality
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o.com+14coursehero.comvalpovinaturismo.cl+5miafrica.net+5unwto.org+5unwto
.orgscribd.comunwto.org.
Article 2 emphasizes gender equality, protection of vulnerable populations, and
active resistance to human exploitation.
Article 3 encourages sustainable growth via environmental stewardship,
resource conservation, and balanced tourism flows.
Together, they form a foundation for responsible, equitable, and environmentally
conscious tourism strategies.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
✅ Assessment
A. Formative Quiz
Match short scenarios to the appropriate Article.
True/False items (e.g., “Article 2 covers gender equality and children’s
protection”).
One brief explanation: how does Article 3 address local environmental issues?
B. Case Analysis Assignment (600–800 words)
Select a real tourism case (Philippines-driven preferred). Analyze using Articles 1–3:
1. Summarize the case background and stakeholders.
2. Apply each Article to assess the ethical dimensions.
3. Recommend actionable measures aligned with these Articles.
4. Reflect on barriers and practical solutions for implementation.
Introduction
The module 6, focused on the importance of engaging local communities; benefit-
sharing; and cultural preservation. This would help you to develop your management,
social, and critical thinking skills through community-based tourism projects.
🎯 Learning Objectives
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧩 Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
3. Role-Play Scenario
Present a heritage site proposed for tourism. Students take roles (community leader,
tour operator, conservationist, local youth). They must:
Propose engagement mechanisms (e.g., advisory councils, workshops)
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ub.
Design benefit-sharing (faire employment, revenue-sharing, cooperatives).
Safeguard cultural authenticity (storytelling, training local guides).
Community
Engagement
Benefit-Sharing
Cultural Preservation
Reflect:
How does power balance impact these initiatives?
What local-government or legal challenges emerged?
How does cultural representation affect authenticity and pride?
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧾 Summary
✅ Assessment
A. Quiz (Formative)
Multiple-choice: Community engagement ensures… Authentic experiences / Cost
reduction / Lower tourism flows?
Short answer: List two benefits of equitable tourism revenue distribution.
True/False: Cultural preservation is irrelevant to local identity—Explain.
B. Strategic Assignment (800–1000 words)
Select a tourism destination (real or hypothetical). Develop a proposal:
1. Plan for engaging the local community in planning and decision-making.
2. Design specific benefit-sharing mechanisms (e.g., cooperatives, percentage of
ticket sales, local hiring targets).
3. Outline cultural preservation steps (storytelling, craft support, rituals).
4. Analyze potential challenges (power dynamics, external investors, government
policy) and propose solutions.
Grading criteria: clarity (25%), stakeholder insight (25%), creativity (25%), feasibility
(25%).
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 7, focused on the principles of sustainable tourism (environmental, social,
economic balance) and their linkage to the United Nation Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs). The principles help you develop how do you integrate strategies that
balance all the three sustainability dimensions for tourism initiative.
🎯 Learning Objectives
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
5. Propose integrated strategies that balance all three sustainability dimensions for
a tourism initiative.
🧩 Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Linked
Tourism Principle Environmental Social Economic
SDGs
Minimize Carbon
✔️ ✔️(cost savings) 7, 13
Footprint
Local Economic
✔️(jobs) ✔️(tourism income) 8, 10
Benefit
Reflective prompts:
Which dimension is often overlooked, and why?
How does the Jamaica case illustrate balancing all three?
What barriers—social, infrastructural, regulatory—might hinder implementation?
🧾 Summary
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
✅ Assessment
A. Formative Quiz
MCQs: Define the triple bottom line; match principles to SDGs.
True/False: "Minimizing waste relates only to environmental goals." (False—also
economic via cost savings.)
Short Answer: Link one principle (e.g., support local businesses) to its SDGs
and explain.
B. Group Project – Tourism Initiative Design (1,000 words + visuals)
Groups design a hypothetical or actual tourism project that:
1. Applies at least three sustainable tourism principles.
2. Demonstrates integration across environmental, social, and economic
dimensions.
3. Maps actions to at least three SDGs.
4. Includes implementation steps and addresses realistic challenges (e.g., funding,
community buy-in, environmental constraints).
Grading focus: clarity of principle-SDG linkage (25%), balance (25%), feasibility (25%),
creativity (25%).
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 8, focused on article 9 of the global code of ethics for tourism that covered
fair wages, safe working conditions, non-discrimination, and workers’ rights. This would
help you to become great manager, developer, implementor of the policies in the
company.
🎯 Learning Objectives
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧩 Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Non-discrimination &
diversity
🔹 Prompts:
How does ensuring fair labor conditions strengthen both workers and
businesses?
What socio-economic or legal barriers might obstruct Article 9 implementation?
Which SDG 8 targets are supported by these practices
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directory.comen.wikipedia.org?
🧾 Summary
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
✅ Assessment
A. Quiz
MCQ: Which Article requires continuous training and social protection? (Article 9)
True/False: Seasonality in tourism means workers do not deserve social
protection. (False—Article 9 mandates protection for seasonal workers.)
Short Answer: List two elements of “decent work” under SDG 8. (e.g., fair
wages, safe working conditions, freedom to organize)
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bd.com+9scribd.comen.wikipedia.org+1en.wikipedia.org+1
B. Practical Assignment (800–1,000 words)
Choose a tourism business or community (real or hypothetical). Analyze labor practices
against Article 9:
1. Describe the current labor situation.
2. Identify at least three gaps (e.g., wage levels, training, discrimination policies).
3. Propose actionable solutions aligned with Article 9 and SDG 8 (including living
wages, hazard controls, HR policy overhaul).
4. Discuss potential limitations (budget, legal context, informality) and mitigation
tactics.
Grading: clarity, alignment with Article 9 and SDG framework, feasibility, critical
analysis.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 9, focused on ethical marketing in tourism. This would help you to become
honest advertiser, avoiding greenwashing, respecting cultural sensitivities, and
preventing exploitation.
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Learning Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
lity-
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nabletravel.org+3en.wikipedia.orgsustainabletravel.org+2itsyourplanet.org+2coursehero
.com+2.
🧾 Summary
✅ Assessment
A. Short Quiz
MCQ: Identify greenwashing from examples.
True/False: “Claims like ‘eco-friendly’ are okay without proof.” (False)
Short answer: List two ways to avoid cultural exploitation in ads.
B. Marketing Critique Assignment (600–800 words)
Choose a real tourism campaign/ad. Analyze:
1. Claims (eco, cultural, authenticity) made and evidence provided.
2. Signs of greenwashing or cultural misrepresentation.
3. Impact on destination/communities.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 10, focused on heritage preservation, minimizing tourism impact,
respecting indigenous rights. This would help you to become a tourism interventionist
and problem solver that protect heritage, empower indigenous communities, and
minimize disruptive impacts.
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Haida Gwaii
El Questro
Batwa Village
Discussion prompts:
What governance arrangements give Indigenous communities real power?
How does heritage preservation contribute to socio-economic well-being?
What risks remain—like cultural commodification, excluding youth, or resource
overuse?
🧾 Summary
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
✅ Assessment
A. Short Quiz
MCQ: ILUA agreements support …
True/False: Cultural heritage tourism always benefits local indigenous
communities. (False)
Short-answer: Name one practice used by Haida Watchmen to protect culture.
B. Design Assignment (800–1,000 words + visual)
Choose a heritage site (actual or hypothetical, e.g., Rice Terraces of the Cordilleras).
Develop a tourism plan that:
1. Details heritage conservation mechanisms (visitor control, material protection,
intangible traditions).
2. Integrates indigenous rights: co-management, land rights, knowledge-sharing.
3. Includes impact-minimization measures (e.g., ecological trails, cultural protocols,
education signs).
4. Identifies risks (e.g., youth disengagement, commercialization, ecosystem wear)
and mitigation strategies.
Grading rubric: effectiveness of strategies, respect for indigenous rights, preservation-
integrity, feasibility, critical insight.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 11, focused on ethical leadership, personal integrity & accountability
tailored for tourism professionals. This would help you develop and strengthen your
leadership skills and personal ethical reflexivity applying different leadership styles.
🎯 Learning Objectives
🧩 Learning Activities
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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eadershipinstitute.com+4leadershipcoachgroup.com+4
o Accountability: owning actions and mistakes
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
🧾 Summary
✅ Assessment
A. Quiz (Formative)
MCQ: Match definitions (e.g., “Integrity” = consistent moral honesty).
True/False: “Transparent leadership means only sharing good news.” (False)
Short answer: Name two outcomes of ethical leadership in tourism.
B. Personal Leadership Plan (Summative, 500–700 words)
Describe a past leadership challenge you faced.
Analyze which ethical traits were present or absent and their impact.
Create an Accountability Action Plan:
o 3 measurable integrity goals (e.g., host monthly ethics check-ins; admit
mistakes promptly).
o Reflection checkpoints (e.g., monthly peer feedback).
Explain how this plan fosters trust and ethical culture in tourism.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Introduction
The module 12, focused on ethical use of artificial intelligence (AI) in tourism
management. This will help you apply and promote responsible and inclusive AI
practices within tourism organizations.
🎯 Learning Objectives:
Topics:
Definition of Artificial Intelligence
Common AI applications in tourism:
o Chatbots and virtual assistants
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Activity:
Small group discussion: “Where have you seen AI used in tourism? What was the
experience like?”
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
Mini-Exercise:
Analyze one tourism AI system (e.g., a chatbot, booking engine, or AI concierge). List 2
potential ethical concerns and suggest solutions.
Recommendations:
Conduct regular AI Ethics Audits
Implement human-in-the-loop systems
Use diverse data sets to reduce bias
Provide clear opt-in/opt-out data collection policies
Train staff on AI literacy and ethics
Template Resource:
Simple Ethical AI Checklist for Tourism Managers (provided as handout or PDF)
Scenario:
A tourism board wants to implement an AI-driven app that tracks tourist movement to
optimize crowd management. Locals are concerned about surveillance, while
businesses are eager to get more customer data.
Group Task:
Identify key stakeholders
Assess the ethical risks
Propose a balanced implementation plan
Presentation:
Each group shares their proposal and receives peer feedback.
Key Takeaways:
Ethical AI use is critical for sustainable and inclusive tourism.
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Course Module in Ethics for Tourism Management
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