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- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 5
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Mahsa Ghorbani, Colorado State University; Anthony A. Maciejewski, Colorado State University; Thomas J. Siller, Colorado State University; Edwin K. P. Chong Ph.D., Colorado State University; Pinar Omur-Ozbek, Colorado State University; Rebecca A. Atadero, Colorado State University
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Engineering Ethics
, p. 644, 1999. [17] Q. Zhu, C. B. Zoltowski, M. K. Feister, P. M. Buzzanell and W. C. Oakes, “The Development of anInstrument for Assessing Individual Ethical Decisionmaking," American Society of EngineeringEducation Annual Conference, Indianapolis, 2014. [18] C. B. Zoltowski, P. M. Buzzanell and W. C. Oakes, “Utilizing an Engineering Ethical ReasoningInstrument in the Curriculum," in American Society of Engineering Education Annual Conference,Atlanta, 2014.[19] A. Colby and W. M. Sullivan, “Ethics Teaching in Undergraduate Engineering Education," Journalof Engineering Education, vol. 97, no. 3, pp. 327-338, 2008.
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- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 4
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Indira Nair, Carnegie Mellon University; William M. Bulleit, Michigan Technological University
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Engineering Ethics
- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 3
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Jessica Mary Smith, Colorado School of Mines; Nicole M. Smith, Colorado School of Mines; Greg Rulifson P.E., Colorado School of Mines; Carrie J. McClelland P.E., Colorado School of Mines; Linda A. Battalora, Colorado School of Mines; Emily A. Sarver, Virginia Tech; Rennie B. Kaunda , Colorado School of Mines
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Engineering Ethics
Case Study from Petroleum Engineering,” Sci. Eng. Ethics, pp. 1–16, Dec. 2016.[9] N.M. Smith, J.M. Smith, L. Battalora and B.A. Teschner, “Industry–University Partnerships: Engineering Education and Corporate Social Responsibility,” J. Prof. Issues Eng. Educ. Pract., vol. 144, no. 3, p. 04018002, Jul. 2018.[10] E. Conlon and H. Zandvoort, “Broadening ethics teaching in engineering: beyond the individualistic approach,” Sci. Eng. Ethics, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 217–232, Jun. 2011.[11] C. Mitcham, “A historico-ethical perspective on engineering education: from use and convenience to policy engagement,” Eng. Stud., vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 35–53, Mar. 2009.[12] Q. Zhu and B. K. Jesiek, “A Pragmatic Approach to Ethical Decision-Making in
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- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 2
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Brendon Lumgair P.Eng., University of Calgary
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Engineering Ethics
of students preferred the synchronous webinars over the in-person lectures. This relativecomparison needed to be tempered with the fact that less than half of the 2014 students actuallyexperienced an in-person lecture in the course.In the first year the discussion forum was open for students for Q&A with the instructor andinteraction amongst students. This was completely voluntary and no marks were gained byparticipating. In the second year, the course outline was changed to assign 6% of the final gradeto discussion forum participation. The expectation was that students would ask one question(start a thread) and reply to five other people’s threads with a meaningful contribution (not just“Liking” their post). This resulted in a nearly a
- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 2
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Rosalyn W. Berne, University of Virginia
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Engineering Ethics
Dr.Thomas’ initial visit to the class, he delivered a detailed lecture on the technologyinvolved in IVF. Being engineers, the students especially appreciated the technicalelements of his lecture, and they asked many questions about the workings of the devicesand processes he described. But his presence was insignificant to the ethics focus of thecourse. Indeed; the subject of ethics never came up, not in his lecture or in the Q & A.This changed, however, in subsequent years, when students left the classroom to travelacross town, to meet with Dr. Thomas inside of his IVF lab.It was there that the students passed by the waiting room for patients seeking help withreproduction, and then saw with their own eyes, the array of technology involved in
- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 3
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Shiloh James Howland, Brigham Young University; Gregg Morris Warnick, Brigham Young University; Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Brent K. Jesiek, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Randall Davies, Brigham Young University
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Diversity
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Engineering Ethics
- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session 3
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- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Danielle Corple, Purdue University, West Lafayette; David H. Torres, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Carla B. Zoltowski, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Katharine E. Miller; Megan Kenny Feister, California State University, Channel Islands; Patrice Marie Buzzanell, University of South Florida
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Engineering Ethics