Enhancing Students’ Ethical Reasoning Through High-Impact Educational Practices: Evidence from an Ethics and Civilization Course

by Agnes Lim Siang Siew, Chong Siew Kian, Julia Cliffton

Published: April 15, 2026 • DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.1026EDU0188

Abstract

Ethics education in higher education is fundamental to developing students’ ethical reasoning, social responsibility, and civic awareness, particularly within multicultural societies. This study examined the effectiveness of High-Impact Educational Practices (HIEPs) in enhancing students’ ethical reasoning in an Ethics and Civilization course. A quantitative cross-sectional survey design was employed involving 66 undergraduate students enrolled in the Appreciation of Ethics and Civilization course at a Malaysian public university. Data were collected using a structured questionnaire grounded in established theories of high-impact pedagogy and ethical reasoning. Descriptive statistics, reliability analysis, and Pearson correlation analysis were conducted. The findings revealed high levels of student engagement with HIEPs (M = 4.12, SD = 0.51) and ethical reasoning (M = 4.08, SD = 0.56). A positive and statistically significant relationship was observed between engagement in HIEPs and ethical reasoning (r = .58, p < .01). These results indicate that student-centred pedagogical approaches, including collaborative learning, discussion-based activities, and authentic assessment, are associated with meaningful improvements in ethical reasoning. From a research and pedagogical perspective, the findings provide empirical support for the systematic integration of High-Impact Educational Practices into ethics curricula and highlight the role of high-impact instructional design in strengthening ethical learning outcomes within multicultural higher education contexts.