- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session - Classroom Practices
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Marilyn A. Dyrud, Oregon Institute of Technology
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Engineering Ethics
Paper ID #25089Plastics: Floating Ethical FlotsamDr. Marilyn A. Dyrud, Oregon Institute of Technology Marilyn Dyrud retired in 2017 as a full professor in the Communication Department at Oregon Institute of Technology, where she taught for four decades. She has been a member of ASEE since 1983 and is active in the Engineering Ethics Division, as past chair, and the Engineering Technology Division, as the current program chair. She is an ASEE fellow (2008), winner of the James McGraw Award (2010), winner of the Berger Award (2013), and serves as the communications editor of the Journal of Engineering Technology. In
- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session - Ethics Decision-Making
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Jonathan Beever, University of Central Florida; Laurie A. Pinkert, University of Central Florida
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Engineering Ethics
. Holsapple, D. Carpenter, J. Sutkus, C. Finelli, K. Walczak, & T. Harding. “AC 2010- 1615: Understanding the Differences Between Faculty and Administrator Goals and Students’ Experience with Ethics Education.” American Society of Engineering Education, 2010.[4] H. Clarkeburn. How to Teach Science Ethics. University of Glasgow. http://these.gla.ac.uk/2852/, 2000.[5] M.J. Bebeau, & S.J. Thoma. “The Impact of a Dental Ethics Curriculum on Moral Reasoning.” Journal of Dental Education, vol. 58, pp. 684-691, 1996.[6] N.A. Fouad and M.C. Santana. “SCCT and Underrepresented Populations in STEM Fields: Moving the Needle.” Journal of Career Assessment, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 24-39, 2017.[7] E
- Conference Session
- Engineering Ethics Division Technical Session - Ethics Across Contexts
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- 2019 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
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Gokhan Egilmez, University of New Haven; Phillip A. Viscomi, University of New Haven ; Maria-Isabel Carnasciali, University of New Haven
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Diversity
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Engineering Ethics
& machine learning. For more information, please visit his personal blog at https://gokhanegilmez.wordpress.com/ and research group page at www.asoslab.comMr. Phillip A. Viscomi, University of New Haven Mr. Viscomi is a technology industry veteran with 25+ years’ experience who has formed, led, grown, and returned value to investors in emerging, mid-size, and Fortune 50 corporations. His record of ac- complishment includes successfully launching four technology companies, multi-billion dollar growth of major global programs, and advising multiple expansion stage technology companies. Viscomi lectures in entrepreneurship, intrapreneurship, and engineering ethics. He published several Kearn Foundation