1) What are morals mainly about? a) Written rules for a profession b) Personal ideas of right and wrong c) Government laws d) Scientific facts 2) What are ethics mainly about? a) Formal guidelines for correct conduct b) A society’s shared emotions c) Personal habits d) Superstitions 3) Which statement shows the biggest difference between morals and ethics? a) Morals are flexible; ethics never change b) Ethics are enforced by police; morals are not c) Morals are personal beliefs; ethics are external codes d) Morals apply at work; ethics apply only at home 4) A doctor follows hospital rules that conflict with her private beliefs. What is guiding her decision? a) Emotions b) Family morals c) Fashion d) Ethics 5) Which example is a moral principle? a) “Engineers must report safety risks.” b) “I should tell the truth.” c) “Lawyers keep client secrets.” d) “Teachers complete 40 hours of training.” 6) The slide says political science studies… a) Cooking styles b) Athletic performance c) Weather patterns d) Systems of governance and political behaviour 7) The slide defines civics as actions that… a) Affect fellow citizens and urban life b) Control the national budget c) Manage private companies d) Focus on ancient history 8) Which activity is a form of civic engagement? a) Voting in a local election b) Travelling abroad c) Buying shares in a company d) Reading a novel alone 9) According to the agenda, the course first covers “Notions of Morals and Ethics.” “Notions” here means… a) Advanced experiments b) Long novels c) Basic concepts and definitions d) Secret traditions 10) The agenda item “Practice” most likely involves… a) Memorising dates b) Hands-on exercises with real cases c) Ignoring class discussion d) Watching unrelated films 11) In intercultural settings, what often causes people to disagree on “right” and “wrong”? a) Differences in cultural morals b) Differences in climate c) Shared global laws d) Identical childhood games 12) Which of these belongs to political engagement rather than civic engagement? a) Cleaning a neighbourhood park b) Taking part in a protest about new tax laws c) Donating books to a library d) Helping paint a school fence 13) If a business sets a formal code of conduct for employees, the document is an example of… a) Personal morality b) Organisational ethics c) National religion d) Popular culture 14) Calling corruption wrong because “everyone in my community rejects it” is reasoning based on… a) Professional ethics b) Scientific data c) Economic theory d) Social morals 15) The slide deck links “right and wrong” to intercultural communication mainly to… a) Limit global trade b) Show how moral/ethical views differ across cultures c) Teach advanced grammar d) Promote one single moral code

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