The ability to make ethical judgements is essential when practising high-quality nursing (Fry, 2004). Changes such as roles between professionals, advances in healthcare technology, privacy issues, revisions to patient care delivery systems and increasing financial constraints can make maintaining these ethics more challenging (Hamric et al., 2013). Nonetheless, nurses are expected to practice and maintain ethical behaviour (Johnstone, 2016). Currently, ethics education that strongly reflects the cultural values of each individual country is being provided (Görgülü & Dinç, 2007; Ujvarine, 2008; White et al., 2018). The Education Module of Ethics Education has been used to teach nursing students sensitivity towards ethical issues, as moral sensitivity and judgement are best acquired and maintained through continuous education and training. This kind of education must be tightly integrated into the undergraduate nursing curriculum (Kim & Park, 2019). "Modules" is an architectural term that indicates credits and composition (Oxford English Dictionary), and it is used in education to indicate models with educational mechanisms for achieving learning goals (Dimopoulos et al., 2009). Nursing ethics education may include case-based learning (Busebaia & John, 2020; Park &