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Teaching Ethics to Researchers: Why and How? Beth A. Fischer, PhD University of Pittsburgh (USA)
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Acknowledgments Michael Zigmond Shigang He Marty Saggese www.skillsandethics.org
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Why Teach Ethics?
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Why teach ethics? May be required Part of good research Not everything is intuitive Cultural differences –disciplinary –geographic
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Not intuitive Authorship –intellectual contribution –understand & defend work –approved final version Submit manuscripts to 1 journal at a time Sharing reagents not just “a good pair of hands”
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Why Teach Ethics?
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Teaching Ethics in Context Two levels of instruction: –university wide –discipline specific
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Requirements for success Background in subject matter Practical experience “Survival skills”
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How are these skills usually learned? Trial and error Individual mentors Separate courses
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“Survival Skills” & Ethics Workshops Being a graduate student or postdoc Writing research articles Making oral presentations Teaching Grant writing Job hunting Starting a faculty position Management skills
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Ethics in survival skills Throughout lectures
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Workshop: Writing Research Articles Topics 1. Why write? 2. Anatomy of a research article 3. Process of writing a paper 4. Developing tables and figures Example:
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Workshop: Making Oral Presentations Topics 1. Objectives for presenting 2. Preparing a research seminar 3. Delivering a presentation 3. Visual aids 4. Other types of presentations Example:
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Ethics in survival skills Throughout lectures “Ethics over lunch”
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Ethics over lunch Group discussion of ethics case 10-15 people Led by researcher Cases Writing: Sharing reagents Oral: Risks of presenting unpublished data
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Faculty training Materials –guidelines for discussions –ethics case –discussion notes Faculty pre-discussion
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Integrated instruction University-wide Discipline-level
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Department level instruction Training in reasoning through cases* “Ethics in the core” *Moral Reasoning in Scientific Research: Cases for Teaching and Assessment (1995)
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Heinz and the Drug* A classic dilemma * Kohlberg, 1963
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Organization of “Ethics in the core” Two 1-hr discussions per course Division of topics Instruction of faculty Materials Evaluation
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Ethical issues in core subjects molecular biology gene therapy clinical science informed consent neuroscience aggression genetic? pharmacology university-industry relations
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Instruction by researchers Understand ethical issues Know norms of field Model interest in ethics Learn by teaching
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Cautions Students become sensitized to issues Faculty may not!
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Safeguards Differentiate for students between –absolutes (e.g., fabrication of data) –relatives (e.g., authorship)
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Safeguards Also communicate with faculty –alert them to activities –educate them (if possible) Identify confidant for students
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Teaching ethics by example Approach to teaching ethics Ethical behavior of faculty Mentoring & professional development
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Summary Ethics is essential to good research Teach ethics as part of research –in context –by researchers
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