Applying the Ten-Step Ethical
Decision-Making Model
— Student Guide
Ten steps. Two case scenarios. Word limits on every box. This worksheet looks structured — but without knowing what each step is actually asking you to demonstrate, it’s easy to write too much in the wrong places and too little in the right ones. This guide breaks down how to approach each step, what the instructor is assessing, and where students typically go wrong.
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The ten-step ethical decision-making model is a structured framework for navigating complex, competing obligations in social work practice. This worksheet tests whether you can identify an ethical dilemma clearly, apply the NASW Code of Ethics with precision, locate relevant law, weigh courses of action honestly, and demonstrate professional judgment — all within strict word limits that force you to be concise and focused.
Two scenarios. Pick one. That decision matters more than students usually realize. The wrong choice — meaning the scenario where you’re less confident on the legal and ethical terrain — can make ten steps feel like twenty. Think about it practically before committing.
Scenario 1 (Mr. Takahashi) is a surrogate decision-making and end-of-life ethics case. It involves an adult with dementia, no advance directive, a same-sex partner with no legal standing, and conflicting family demands. The ethical tension is between autonomy, beneficence, and the legal hierarchy of decision-makers. The law question is about guardianship, surrogate consent, and state-specific healthcare proxy statutes.
Scenario 2 (Chris) is a minor confidentiality and mandatory reporting case. It involves a 15-year-old in a sexual relationship with a 26-year-old — which is statutory rape in virtually every U.S. state — along with religious family conflict, non-binary identity, depression, and a client begging for confidentiality. The ethical tension is between client self-determination and the legal duty to report. The law question has a much clearer answer. That clarity can be an advantage or a trap depending on how you handle the nuance.
Choose Scenario 1 if you are comfortable with:
- End-of-life ethics and surrogacy hierarchies
- Dementia and decisional capacity law
- Same-sex partnership rights and legal limitations
- Advance directives and healthcare proxies
- Competing family vs. partner authority
Choose Scenario 2 if you are comfortable with:
- Minor confidentiality law and its limits
- Mandatory reporting statutes (statutory rape)
- LGBTQ+ affirming practice with minors
- Family-client conflict and parental authority
- Balancing duty to report vs. therapeutic relationship
Scenario 2 Has a Legal Answer — but That’s Not All It Tests
The relationship between Chris and Bruce is statutory rape. The mandatory reporting obligation is almost certainly triggered in every U.S. jurisdiction regardless of Chris’s wishes. But the worksheet isn’t just asking you to identify that legal obligation — it’s asking you to work through the ethical complexity that surrounds it: the therapeutic relationship, the risk of disclosure to a hostile family, the harm to a vulnerable client, and how to implement the required action with care and professional integrity. Don’t mistake “legally clear” for “ethically simple.”
The Ten-Step Model — What Each Step Is Asking and How Much Space You Have
Before writing a word in any box, map out what each step is actually testing. The word limits aren’t arbitrary — they reflect the type of thinking each step requires. Step 1 forces a focused, clear articulation. Steps 7 and 8 give you more room because they require genuine analysis. Don’t treat all ten steps as if they carry equal weight or require equal depth.
Notice where the model puts you under the tightest constraint. Steps 1, 3, 4, and 6 each limit you to 50 words. That’s not room for context-setting or preamble. Every word has to carry information. The instinct to write a scene-setting paragraph before getting to the point will blow the word limit before you’ve answered anything. Get to the substance immediately in every step.
The Word Limits Are Requirements, Not Suggestions
Going significantly over the word count on a structured worksheet like this typically loses marks — it signals you couldn’t prioritize and synthesize, which is exactly what the model is designed to test. Write to the limit. If you have room left, check whether you’ve actually answered everything the step asks. If you’re over, cut context rather than content.
Steps 1–4 — Defining the Dilemma, Stakeholders, Ethics, and Values
Step 1 — Identifying the Ethical Dilemma (50 words)
The single most important sentence in the entire worksheet
Step 1 is not a summary of the scenario. It’s not background information. It’s the ethical dilemma — the specific conflict between two or more competing professional obligations that makes this situation genuinely difficult. If your response describes what happened rather than what the ethical tension is, you haven’t completed Step 1.
A useful test: can you state the dilemma as a conflict between two values, duties, or rights? For Scenario 1, the core tension is between the partner’s claim to decision-making authority and the biological family’s competing claim — in the absence of a legal mechanism to resolve it. For Scenario 2, it’s between the mandatory legal duty to report and the ethical duty of confidentiality and client self-determination. State that conflict directly. Don’t work up to it.
Step 2 — Stakeholders and Their Roles (150 words)
Who is affected by this decision — and in what capacity?
Step 2 has the most generous word limit in the first half of the worksheet. Use it to be thorough. The question asks for at least two individuals, groups, or organizations — but “at least two” means you should be covering the full stakeholder picture in 150 words, not just naming the most obvious parties.
For each stakeholder, identify their role in the situation and how your decision could affect them. Role is specific: “Mr. Takahashi’s daughter” has a different role than “Mr. Takahashi’s biological children as a group,” and both have different roles than “the daycare center staff.” The daycare center, in particular, is often omitted — but it’s a stakeholder with its own institutional obligations, liability exposure, and professional duties.
Think about direct and indirect stakeholders. The client is always primary. But the family members, the organization, the social worker, and potentially the state all have stakes in how the dilemma is resolved. Identify each by role, not just by name.
Step 3 — NASW Code of Ethics: Principles and Standards (50 words)
Cite specifically — section numbers, not just themes
This is the step most students get half-right. They name general ethical principles — dignity, self-determination, confidentiality — but don’t cite the specific sections of the NASW Code of Ethics that enshrine those principles. The assignment asks for at least one ethical principle and two ethical standards. Those are distinct things in the NASW Code’s structure.
The NASW Code has six core values, each associated with ethical principles. It also has detailed ethical standards grouped by context. When Step 3 asks for an ethical principle, it means one of those core principle statements. When it asks for ethical standards, it means specific, citable standards from the Code — with their section numbers. “Confidentiality” is a theme. “NASW Code of Ethics, Section 1.07” is a standard. That specificity is what the step is testing. The full NASW Code is publicly available at naswcode.org and is a citable source for this step.
Step 4 — Conflicting Values, Biases, and Conflicts of Interest (50 words)
Be honest — this is asking about your own potential biases as a practitioner
Step 4 is uncomfortable by design. Social work education asks you to identify not just where the scenario presents value conflicts, but where your own biases and potential conflicts of interest might affect your professional judgment. That’s what “conflicting values, potential biases, and possible conflicts of interest” means.
The values conflict is in the scenario — autonomy vs. beneficence, client confidentiality vs. mandatory reporting. But the bias component is personal: does the scenario trigger assumptions based on your own cultural background, family structure, religious beliefs, or views on LGBTQ+ relationships? Does the scenario create a conflict of interest — for example, if you have personal views about same-sex partnership that could affect how you advocate for Mr. Lee? This step requires self-awareness, not just content knowledge. Be direct about it. Fifty words is tight — name the values conflict, name the bias, name the conflict of interest. No elaboration.
Steps 5–6 — Identifying Relevant Law and Consulting Appropriately
These two steps are where the worksheet moves from ethics to professional practice. Step 5 grounds the decision in legal reality. Step 6 tests your understanding of professional consultation — who you go to, and why.
Step 5 — State Statutory Law (100 words)
One specific law, by statute — not a general legal principle
The brief says “identify at least one state statutory law by statute.” That means a named, citable law — not “laws about confidentiality” or “reporting requirements.” You need an actual statute: the name of the law, the statute number, the state it applies to, and a one-to-two sentence explanation of how it applies to this specific scenario. This is one of the harder steps for students who aren’t familiar with how to locate state statutes.
For Scenario 1, the relevant statute will depend on the state you set the scenario in (most scenarios like this are set in a specific state, or students choose one). You’re looking for your state’s healthcare surrogate or proxy statute — the law that governs who has authority to make medical decisions for an incapacitated adult when no advance directive exists. The hierarchy typically prioritizes legal spouses, then adult children, then parents, then close friends. Mr. Lee, as an unmarried partner, typically falls at the bottom of this hierarchy or outside it entirely — which is the crux of the legal tension in this scenario.
For Scenario 2, you’re looking for your state’s mandatory reporting statute for suspected child abuse or sexual abuse, and potentially the statutory rape law (age of consent statute). In most states, a 26-year-old engaging in sexual activity with a 15-year-old is statutory rape regardless of consent — and social workers are mandatory reporters with a legal obligation to report.
Your state legislature’s website or a legal database like Justia or Cornell’s Legal Information Institute can help you locate the specific statute text. The NASW also publishes state-by-state practice guides that reference relevant statutes for social workers.
Step 6 — Consultation Actions (50 words)
Who you consult and what specific action comes from it
Step 6 asks for at least two actions taken when consulting with a colleague, supervisor, or legal expert. The key word is “actions.” Not who you talked to — what you decided or did as a result of that consultation.
The step is testing whether you understand consultation as a professional practice tool, not just a box to check. A colleague might help you reality-check your instinct about the dilemma. A supervisor can clarify agency policy and your professional obligations. A legal expert — particularly relevant for Scenario 2 — clarifies the mandatory reporting obligation and the process for making that report correctly. For each consultation, state who you consulted, what the specific action or decision was, and why that action was the right professional response given the consultation’s input. Fifty words forces you to be surgical.
Consultation in social work isn’t about getting permission. It’s about making sure your professional judgment is informed, documented, and defensible. That distinction matters in Steps 6, 7, and 8.
— Core principle of professional social work practiceSteps 7–8 — Courses of Action and Choosing One
Steps 7 and 8 are where the model becomes analytical rather than descriptive. This is where the strongest papers separate themselves.
Step 7 — Two Possible Courses of Action (100 words)
Each action needs benefits, risks, consequences, and participants
Step 7 is doing a lot in 100 words: two courses of action, each with its consequences, benefits, risks, and identified participants. That’s eight content points in a hundred words. Every sentence has to carry weight. Don’t name three or four actions and give each one a single sentence — that produces a list, not an analysis. Pick two meaningful, contrasting courses of action and treat each one with specificity.
What makes a good course of action for this step? It should be a real professional response — not a fantasy or an impossible option. It should differ from the other option in a meaningful, consequential way. And it should have genuine, case-specific benefits and risks — not generic pros and cons that would apply to any scenario. For Scenario 2, one course of action might be making the mandatory report immediately and another might be disclosing to Chris first and giving them agency in how the report is filed. Both are real options. Both have specific consequences for Chris, the parents, Bruce, the therapeutic relationship, and your professional standing.
Step 8 — Choosing One Course of Action (100 words)
Commit to one option and justify it with ethical and legal reasoning
Step 8 requires a decision. Name the action you chose. State why you chose it over the alternative. That “why” should connect back to the NASW Code, the law identified in Step 5, and the professional values at stake. A rationale that just says “this was the more ethical choice” isn’t a rationale — it’s a conclusion without reasoning.
The strongest Step 8 responses acknowledge the trade-off. You’re not choosing the option with no downside. You’re choosing the option where the ethical and legal weight of its benefits outweighs the ethical and legal weight of its costs. Name that trade-off explicitly. Say what you’re giving up and why what you’re gaining is worth it. That’s professional judgment — and it’s what this step is testing.
Steps 9–10 — Implementation and Evaluation
Step 9 — Three Steps to Implement the Chosen Action (100 words)
Operational and sequential — not general principles
Step 9 is practical. Not “communicate with the client” in the abstract — what specifically do you say, when, to whom, and in what sequence? Implementation steps should be ordered. They should name the specific people involved. They should reference the specific action chosen in Step 8. If you chose to file a mandatory report in Scenario 2, your implementation steps might be: (1) document the disclosure and your assessment in the client record immediately; (2) notify Chris of your legal obligation and what will happen next before making the report; (3) contact the appropriate reporting agency (Child Protective Services or equivalent) and provide the mandated information. That sequence is operational, specific, and traceable back to a professional obligation.
Avoid implementation steps that are more accurately described as rationale. “Consider the ethical implications” is not an implementation step — that belongs in Steps 7 and 8. Implementation steps are actions, not reflections.
Step 10 — Evaluating the Action or Outcome (100 words)
How do you know if the decision was the right one?
Step 10 is evaluation — not reflection or self-congratulation. It asks how you would assess whether the course of action was effective and appropriate. That means identifying specific indicators or processes. How would you know, after the fact, that your decision was professionally sound? What would you look for?
Two categories of evaluation matter here. First: did the action achieve its intended professional goal? For Scenario 2, did the report reach the appropriate agency? Was Chris kept safe? Did the therapeutic relationship survive in some form? Second: is the decision defensible on professional and ethical grounds? Does the documentation support the rationale? Would a peer review or supervisor review of the case confirm you acted in accordance with the NASW Code and applicable law? State at least two concrete evaluation steps — not two abstract feelings about whether you did the right thing.
Using the NASW Code of Ethics Correctly — Principles vs. Standards
The NASW Code comes up explicitly in Step 3 and implicitly in Steps 7 and 8. Most students know it exists. Fewer know how to cite it correctly or distinguish its structural components — which matters for this worksheet.
| NASW Code Component | What It Is | Where It Appears in Worksheet |
|---|---|---|
| Core Values | Six fundamental values: service, social justice, dignity and worth, importance of human relationships, integrity, competence | Background — reference in Step 4 when identifying conflicting values |
| Ethical Principles | One principle for each core value, stated in the Ethical Principles section of the Code | Step 3 — “at least one ethical principle” means one of these six |
| Ethical Standards | Specific practice standards organized by context (clients, colleagues, practice settings, professions, broader society) with section numbers | Step 3 — “two ethical standards” means two specific, numbered standards from this section |
The standards most commonly relevant to these two scenarios include:
- Section 1.01 — Commitment to Clients: social workers’ primary responsibility is to promote the wellbeing of clients. Relevant to both scenarios — but note the tension when client wellbeing conflicts with legal obligations or third-party safety.
- Section 1.02 — Self-Determination: social workers respect clients’ rights to make their own decisions. Directly relevant to both scenarios — but this right has limits when clients cannot exercise it (Scenario 1) or when legal obligations override it (Scenario 2).
- Section 1.07 — Privacy and Confidentiality: governs when confidentiality may be breached. Critical for Scenario 2. Section 1.07(c) specifically addresses when disclosure is required by law.
- Section 1.14 — Clients Who Lack Decision-Making Capacity: directly applicable to Scenario 1. Describes the social worker’s obligations when a client cannot make informed decisions.
- Section 2.05 — Consultation: social workers should seek consultation when it serves clients’ interests — directly relevant to Step 6.
Verified External Source: NASW Code of Ethics
The National Association of Social Workers publishes the full Code of Ethics publicly at socialworkers.org. This is the primary required source for Step 3 and should be cited directly in APA format as: National Association of Social Workers. (2021). NASW code of ethics. NASW Press. This is a source you should cite in-text whenever you name a specific ethical principle or standard in your responses.
Finding and Citing Three Credible Sources — What Counts and What Doesn’t
Three outside credible sources. All cited in APA. With in-text citations throughout the worksheet — not just in the references section. That last requirement is the one students most commonly miss. If you cite a source in your references but never use an in-text citation to connect it to a specific step, it doesn’t satisfy the requirement.
What counts as a credible outside source for this assignment? Peer-reviewed journal articles, edited books from academic publishers, official government or professional organization publications (NASW, state statutes, DHHS), and recognized legal information databases. What doesn’t count as a standalone source: Wikipedia, general health websites, course slides, or the textbook alone without additional outside sources.
APA Citation Examples for This Assignment
APA 7th EditionNational Association of Social Workers. (2021). NASW code of ethics. NASW Press.
In-text: (NASW, 2021) or (National Association of Social Workers, 2021)
[State] [Statute Title], [Statute Number] (Year).
Example: California Probate Code, Cal. Prob. Code § 4671 (2023).
In-text: (Cal. Prob. Code § 4671, 2023)
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year). Title of article. Journal Name, Volume(Issue), pages. https://doi.org/xxxxx
In-text: (Author & Author, Year)
Author, A. (Year). Chapter title. In E. Editor (Ed.), Book title (pp. xx–xx). Publisher.
In-text: (Author, Year, p. xx)
In-text citations go directly after the claim they support — not at the end of the paragraph. For a worksheet like this, that often means the citation appears within a sentence, not at its end. Place them where they anchor the specific ethical standard, legal reference, or scholarly claim you’re making in that step.
Where to Find Appropriate Sources for Each Scenario
Ethics and Social Work Practice
Search PubMed, PsycINFO, or Social Work Abstracts for peer-reviewed articles on social work ethics, surrogate decision-making, or minor confidentiality. Keywords: “social work ethical decision-making,” “surrogate consent dementia,” “minor confidentiality mandatory reporting.”
State Law and Statutes
Cornell’s Legal Information Institute (law.cornell.edu) and Justia (justia.com) provide free access to state statutes by topic. Search “[your state] healthcare surrogate” or “[your state] mandatory reporting statute.”
Professional Standards
NASW’s official publications and policy statements (socialworkers.org) are citable professional sources. The NASW also publishes practice standards and legal guides relevant to both scenarios.
Clinical and Practice Research
Journals like Social Work, Journal of Social Work Education, and Families in Society publish peer-reviewed articles on end-of-life ethics, LGBTQ+ practice, and minor clients — all relevant to these scenarios.
Mistakes That Cost Marks on This Worksheet
Summarizing the Scenario Instead of Naming the Dilemma
Happens in Step 1 more than any other step
Step 1 gets 50 words to identify the ethical dilemma. The most common use of those 50 words is retelling parts of the scenario. That’s not a dilemma identification — it’s a case summary. The instructor already knows the scenario. What they’re marking in Step 1 is whether you can isolate the specific competing ethical obligations that create the dilemma. Name the conflict between two professional duties or values and stop. Everything else is background that belongs nowhere in Step 1.
Citing the NASW Code by Theme Rather Than by Section
The difference between a vague reference and a citable standard
Writing “the NASW Code of Ethics emphasizes confidentiality” does not satisfy Step 3’s requirement for two ethical standards. Confidentiality is a theme. NASW Code Section 1.07(a) is an ethical standard. The difference matters because the worksheet asks you to apply specific provisions of the Code to the specific facts of the scenario — not gesture toward general values. Look up the section numbers. Cite them. Explain in one sentence each how that specific provision applies to what’s happening in your chosen scenario.
Treating Step 4 as a Values Conflict in the Scenario Rather Than in Yourself
The bias question is about the practitioner, not the case
Step 4 asks about conflicting values, potential biases, and possible conflicts of interest. The values conflict in the scenario is one part of this. But “potential biases” and “possible conflicts of interest” are asking about the practitioner — about you. What assumptions might a social worker bring to this scenario that could affect their professional judgment? That requires self-reflection, not case analysis. A response that only discusses the values tension in the scenario and never addresses the practitioner’s potential biases has not fully answered the question.
Skipping In-Text Citations Within the Worksheet Steps
The requirement is citations in the text, not only in the references list
The directions say “include in-text citations.” That means every specific claim you make about a legal standard, an ethical code provision, or a scholarly concept should be followed by a parenthetical citation. Many students write all ten steps without a single in-text citation and then list three references at the end. That doesn’t meet the requirement. Place citations where you make the specific claims they support — in Step 3 when citing the NASW Code, in Step 5 when citing the statute, and in any other step where you reference a source.
Choosing a Course of Action in Step 8 Without Naming the Trade-Off
A rationale that doesn’t acknowledge the cost of the choice isn’t a rationale
Step 8 is where students often write the most confident-sounding responses — and sometimes the most intellectually thin ones. Stating that you chose Action A because it best protects the client’s dignity is a starting point, not a complete rationale. What did you give up by not choosing Action B? What risk does Action A carry that you’re accepting? What specific ethical standard or legal obligation tipped the balance? The response that acknowledges the genuine difficulty of the choice — and can still defend the choice made — demonstrates the professional judgment the model is designed to assess.
FAQs: Ten-Step Ethical Decision-Making Model Worksheet
What a Strong Worksheet Looks Like From Start to Finish
The ten-step model works because it forces a structured, disciplined approach to a problem that can feel overwhelming when you’re inside it. It separates what you know (the dilemma), who it affects (stakeholders), what the profession requires (NASW Code), what the law requires (statute), and what you’ll actually do (course of action) — so that each decision point is considered deliberately rather than reactively.
A strong worksheet stays specific at every step. It names provisions, not themes. It cites statutes, not legal concepts. It acknowledges trade-offs, not just the upside of the chosen action. And it connects every step back to the actual facts of the chosen scenario — not to generalized social work principles that could apply to any ethical dilemma.
If you need support locating sources, structuring your responses within the word limits, or thinking through the ethical and legal analysis for either scenario, social work assignment help at Smart Academic Writing is available for students at every stage of social work education.