level of awareness is inserted when teachers develop
their capacity to identify how moral values and its
sources become and how the ethic can be done
through the action, utterance, decision, and their own
intention. This relationship is created intellectually,
emotionally, intuitively, philosophically, practically,
and experientially. It happens when the teacher makes
a self-reflection and collective discussion with his
colleagues about the job they have been pursued
every day”. Furthermore, Campbell (2003) suggests
that Moral Agency is the result of professional role
and responsibility of the teacher, it is expressed and
confirmed in daily practice by giving role model, self-
management, moral teaching, connecting and
advising and self-involvement. Moral agency is
counselling about goodness and moral principles and
ethic which are intertwined from the difficulties both
in life and in the classroom.
Regarding to Campbell (2003), (1) it is important
to build trust toward the teacher that has obligation as
moral agency which is classified into two activities
area: ethically doing a professional action such as
wisdom, discipline, altruistic, cooperative, visionary,
responsible, and full integrity to the job; and (2)
teaching moral values using character education
approach such as honesty, just, bravery, patriotism,
patience, empathy, etc. The purpose of character
education is to shape students’ identity to have a
quality of moral character as well as good
characteristic performance. Moral character can be
defined as the power to do a good thing anytime and
anywhere, while the characteristic of performance
can be defined as capacity or power to do best with
full integrity to achieve a life goal properly (Davidson
et al., 2010).
In conducting the obligation, teacher must
become a good role model for everyone, both for the
students, students’ family, work partner, headmaster
and the grand society. Vargas (2001) in a particular
research about teacher moral development and
professional ethic, noted that behavior, nature, value
and priority of the teacher is the most prominent
factor in making role model for the student, and also
transfer value of goodness to the student. In line with
Vargas (2001), Ki Hajar Dewantara, an education
scholar in Indonesia, expressed a concept of
“Leadership Trilogy” in educational context. This
trilogy is a portrayal of a teacher as the leader in
educational world which should have three
characteristics. First, the teacher should be capable to
be a role model for the student; second, the teacher
needs to escalate the spirit and affection among the
student. Third, the teacher should be capable to lead
the student: (a) (guiding students’ behavior) to have a
high ethic. (b) Giving trust to a student to find the
potentiality or nature (Ibrahim and Hendriani, 2017).
4.3 Development Structure of Moral
Agency
The Development Structure of Moral Agency in the
context of the development of professional ethics has
been formulated by the followers of Kohlberg which
is often called Neo-Kohlbergisme incorporated in
'The Minnesota Group' (Rest, Narvaez, Thomas and
Bebeau) initiated the FCM theory (four-component
model of moral functioning) implicated in the
development of professional ethics. Neo-
Kohlbergisme research is summarized by Howard J.
Curzer in his article entitled "Tweaking the Four-
Component Model", Curzer (2014) explains:
“four-component model of moral functioning
(FCM). The components of the FCM are: moral
sensitivity (the ability to recognize the morally
salient aspects of a situation and to interpret
morally challenging situations), moral judgment
(the deliberative ability to determine which
options in a situations are morally required,
acceptable or prohibited), moral motivation (the
prioritizing of morality, i.e. the lack of
inclinations contrary to morality or the ability to
force oneself to do the right thing despite contrary
inclinations), and moral character (the package
of abilities that one needs in order to implement
one’s moral choices effectively)”
Referring to the Curzer's opinion, researchers
could make the four components as the structure of
moral agents development in the context of teaching
profession ethics. Strengthened by Rest et al. (1999)
who also developed FCM into the development of
professional ethics in general. The first component is
moral sensitivity, in the opinion Rest et al. (1999)
moral sensitivity is a skill that includes knowledge
and emotions about the issue or problems that hit the
profession, also, the abilities of regulation, code of
ethics, and the norms of one's profession, and
knowing when they should be applied. The second
component is moral consideration, Rest et al. (1999)
poses moral judgment as the ability to think carefully
about professional dilemmas, such as when to give
appropriate moral judgments in the professional life.
The third component is moral motivation, Rest et al.
(1999) calls it the ability to find the identity of the
profession, build commitment and integrity in the
profession, and design strategies for self-
improvement. The fourth component is the moral
character; the author is more suitable to use the word