Stetson University Hosts Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition

Sixteen schools participated in the international event

Stetson University Hosts Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition
Stetson University Hosts Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition

DELAND, Florida, Feb. 28, 2022 – The annual Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition was hosted virtually Feb. 17-18 by Stetson University. Undergraduate students from invited institutions had the opportunity to analyze and present arguments on a contemporary business issue with financial, legal and ethical implications.

Through the generous support of Troy and Sissy Templeton, the Stetson Business Ethics Initiative within the School of Business Administration, sponsors the Templeton Case Competition each spring semester.

Teams from these 16 institutions participated in the 2022 competition:

  • Belmont University
  • Campbell University
  • Clemson University
  • Elon University
  • Florida Gulf Coast University
  • Florida State University
  • Georgetown University
  • Iowa State University
  • Northern Illinois University
  • Pennsylvania State University
  • St. Petersburg College
  • Universidad Panamericana
  • University of Calgary
  • University of Florida
  • University of Massachusetts-Amherst
  • University of North Dakota

After receiving the case, student teams were given two weeks to prepare and submit an executive summary and a visual presentation. The case presented to the students this year was titled “Building Codes and the Climate Crisis: The ICC and Stakeholder Alignment.”

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Teams took on the identity of consultants, advising CEO Dominic Sims and the senior management team of the International Code Council on the financial, legal and ethical issues surrounding the process they will adopt for the upcoming code development cycle — while keeping in mind the delicate situation in which the ICC finds itself regarding its relationship to all its stakeholders. Specifically, the teams were told that CEO Sims wants to ensure that the ICC’s model energy conservation code (IECC) does not become irrelevant because it does not address the climate change crisis with the seriousness and urgency advocated by state and local code officers. At the same time, Sims is equally concerned that the ICC does not alienate significant constituents in the building construction industry and the fossil fuel industry.

During the event, teams made an oral presentation to a panel of judges. Bracket winners then delivered a final eight-minute oral presentation to the entire body of judges in a plenary session that included all conference attendees, members of the Stetson University community and the public.

For the second consecutive year, Campbell University students placed first in the competition. University of Massachusetts-Amherst took second place, St. Petersburgh College came in third and Florida Gulf Coast University finished fourth.

Stetson University Business Ethics Team makes finals at Georgetown University International Business Case Competition

The top four teams and the four bracket runners-up (Pennsylvania State University, Georgetown University, Belmont University and Clemson University) all received cash prizes. The benefactors of the program, Troy and Sissy Templeton, were present for the Awards Ceremony on Friday, Feb. 18.

Representatives from business leadership positions across Florida, as well as two higher education faculty members, volunteered their time to serve as judges for the competition, including: Peter Brockway, executive-in-residence, Wake Forest University; Yvonne Chang, director, Club Management and Regulatory Affairs, Disney Vacation Club; Randall Croom, PhD, associate professor of management, Stetson University; Helena Dabrowski, director of Finance, Sunshine Ace Hardware; Paul Dascher, PhD, retired dean, Stetson University School of Business Administration; Theo Etzel, CEO and owner, Conditioned Air; Elin Kunz, certified health care compliance specialist; Brent Gibbs, principal counsel, Walt Disney Parks and Resort, U.S.; Elliott Grosh, P.E., retired senior vice president, PBS&J Corp.; Debbie Lashinsky, retired senior director of I.T., Ryder System; Karen Nalven, president and CEO, Better Business Bureau, West Florida; Cathy Wood, retired senior vice president of Finance and Business Services, Florida Institute of Technology.

The international competition included teams from Canada and Mexico and was produced with the help of student members of Stetson’s Business Ethics Case Competition team (BECC). Stetson students Bec Hett, captain of the team; Matt Clements; Mark Manglardi; and Jaylen Walton served in the role of Bracket Coordinators.


“The Templeton Business Ethics Case Competition is a wonderful example of the transfer of learned course material to a real-world setting,” commented Jim Beasley, PhD, Stetson professor of management and founding director of the event. “The use of concrete, actual business dilemmas in the cases analyzed by student participants prompts a level of learning that significantly supplements students’ curricular programs in business education.”

John Tichenor, PhD, co-director of the competition and associate professor of management, said, “Over the past seven years, the Templeton has become a premier program of experiential learning for business students from universities in the United States, Canada and Mexico.”


About Stetson University

Founded in 1883, Stetson University is the oldest private university in Central Florida. Stetson focuses on intense learning experiences in a supportive community that allows students to develop their voice in a connected, inclusive environment. Stetson ranks in the top five on U.S. News & World Report’s list of Best Regional Universities (South) and is consistently recognized as one of The Princeton Review’s Best CollegesStay connected with Stetson on social media.

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