Asee peer logo
Displaying results 61 - 90 of 867 in total
Conference Session
Engineering, Ethics, and Leadership
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Michelle Marincel Payne, Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; Kenneth W. Lamb P.E., California State Polytechnic University, Pomona; Seth Claberon Sullivan, Texas A&M University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS), Engineering Leadership Development Division (LEAD)
teamsAbstractPsychological safety is emerging in the literature as a gateway to creating high performing teamsand high team satisfaction. Studies have demonstrated that psychological safety is a keyingredient in the ability of teams to perform to a higher degree than they otherwise would be ableto. In this research, we continue to expand the assessment of psychological safety in seniorcapstone teams to include data from engineering programs across four different institutions toprovide a sense of the experiences on capstone design teams and impacts interventions mayhave. We also begin to explore approaches to improve psychological safety in senior capstoneteams by focusing on improving students’ awareness of their ethics (the principles that guidetheir choices). The
Conference Session
Engineering, Ethics, and Leadership
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
B. Michael Aucoin P.E., Texas A&M University; Zhendi Zhang, Texas A&M University; Miles O. Dodd, Texas A&M University
Tagged Divisions
Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS), Engineering Leadership Development Division (LEAD)
Paper ID #43424Exploration of Career and Ethical Challenges of Analytics and GenerativeArtificial Intelligence in an Engineering Leadership CourseDr. B. Michael Aucoin P.E., Texas A&M University B. Michael Aucoin is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Engineering Technology & Industrial Distribution at Texas A&M University, an Adjunct Instructor in the School of Leadership Studies at Gonzaga University, and President of Electrical Expert, Inc.Zhendi Zhang, Texas A&M UniversityMiles O. Dodd, Texas A&M University Miles Dodd is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Engineering Technology at Texas A&
Conference Session
Engineering, Ethics, and Community Engagement
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tiffany Smith, NASA; Zachary T. G. Pirtle, NASA
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division (COMMENG), Engineering Ethics Division (ETHICS)
Paper ID #43419Engineering a Bridge Across Cultures: Insights to Support Dialogue withEngineering Professionals on Ethical and Social Design ConsiderationsMs. Tiffany Smith, NASA Tiffany Smith serves as NASA’s Chief Knowledge Officer (CKO) and Director of the Office of the Chief Engineer’s Academy of Program/Project and Engineering Leadership (APPEL). Ms. Smith is responsible for managing NASA’s APPEL Knowledge Services learning and development program, providing strategic communications and continuous learning to project management and systems engineering personnel, and overseeing knowledge services across the agency in
Conference Session
Engineering, Ethics, and Community Engagement
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tucker Krone, Washington University in St. Louis; Seema Mukhi Dahlheimer, Washington University in St. Louis; Sandra Payton Matteucci
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division (COMMENG)
Paper ID #41379Engagement in Practice: Innovating a Project-Based, Community EngagedCourse for Engineering Students that Fosters Ethical ThinkingProf. Tucker Krone, Washington University in St. Louis Tucker Krone joined the faculty in the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis in 2017. He teaches statistics, ethics, publication writing, communication, and community engaged courses. Tucker emphasizes engineering and statistics as forces for equity and social justice. Tucker Krone’s current passion focuses on integrating community engagement, social justice, equity, diversity and inclusion into
Conference Session
Engineering, Ethics, and Community Engagement
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Emma Sophie Stine, University of Colorado Boulder; Amy Javernick-Will, University of Colorado Boulder
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Community Engagement Division (COMMENG)
education programs found that‬ ‭engineering educators often attribute engineering project failures to technical, communication, or‬ ‭cultural issues and overlook the oppressive systems that could contribute to a pattern of failures‬ ‭across projects.‬I‭ nstead, students have expressed frustration with only being shown cases of failure‬‭[21]‬‭and‬ ‭wanting examples of success stories. HE students have expressed “just wanting to know what to‬ ‭do" when encountering complex ethical and ambiguous questions. Further, without clear‬ ‭answers, they express frustration and disengagement from discussion topics around systematic‬ ‭oppression‬‭[5]‬‭. Other scholarship has shown students‬‭dropping out of engineering spaces when‬
Conference Session
Innovating Inclusivity: Rethinking Access and Empowerment in STEM Education
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Ioulia Rytikova, George Mason University; Mihai Boicu, George Mason University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Culture & Social Justice in Education Division (EQUITY), Equity
Paper ID #43435Anti-racism, Inclusion, Diversity and Equity in Database Curriculum ThroughGroup Research Projects on Historical, Social and Ethical Database RelatedTopicsDr. Ioulia Rytikova, George Mason University Ioulia Rytikova is a Professor and an Associate Chair for Graduate Studies in the Department of Information Sciences and Technology at George Mason University. She received a B.S./M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Automated Control Systems Engineering and Information Processing. Her research interests lie at the intersection of Data Science and Big Data Analytics, Cognitive and Learning Sciences, Educational Data Mining
Conference Session
Faculty Development Division (FDD) Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bono Po-Jen Shih, Pennsylvania State University; Sarah E Zappe, Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
Faculty Development Division (FDD)
Paper ID #43000Board 121: Lessons Learned: Mapping and Mobilizing Faculty Assets forCreating Faculty-Development Programs in Engineering Ethics EducationBono Po-Jen Shih, Pennsylvania State University Bono Po-Jen Shih is an interdisciplinary scholar working in the intersection of philosophy, history, and sociology of engineering with an eye on contemporary engagement with engineering education and practice. His publications appear in Springer’s Philosophy of Engineering and Technology (PET) book series, the journal Techn´e: Research in Philosophy and Technology, and the Taiwanese Journal for Studies of Science, Technology
Conference Session
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Chun Kit Chui, University of Hong Kong; LEI YANG, The University of Hong Kong; Ben Kao, University of Hong Kong
Tagged Divisions
Technological and Engineering Literacy/Philosophy of Engineering Division (TELPhE)
Paper ID #41924Empowering Students in Emerging Technology: A Framework for DevelopingHands-on Competency in Generative AI with Ethical ConsiderationsDr. Chun Kit Chui, University of Hong Kong Dr. Chun Kit Chui serves as the Director of the Tam Wing Fan Innovation Wing in the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Hong Kong (HKU). Innovation Wing aims to unleash students’ creativity by entrusting them to spearhead ambitious innovation and technology projects that will shape the future. The iconic facility is located at the heart of the campus, offering 2400m2 of space with state-of-the-art resources and a supportive
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Isil Anakok, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Justin L Hess, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Sowmya Panuganti, Purdue Engineering Education; Brent K Jesiek, Purdue University, West Lafayette; Andrew Katz, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity, NSF Grantees Poster Session
focuses on ethical and empathic formation in engineering education. He received his PhD from Purdue University’s School of Engineering Education, as well as a Master of Science and Bachelor of Science from Purdue University’s School of Civil Engineering. He is the editorial board chair for the Online Ethics Center, deputy director of research for the National Institute of Engineering Ethics, and past-division chair for the ASEE Liberal Education/Engineering and Society division.Sowmya Panuganti, Purdue Engineering Education Sowmya Panuganti is a graduate student at Purdue University in the Engineering Education department. She is passionate about understanding engineering culture and the effects it has on engineers’ mental
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Todd Freeborn, The University of Alabama; Claire Major, The University of Alabama; Miriam E. Sweeney, The University of Alabama
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Paper ID #41558Board 285: First-Year Electrical and Computer Engineering UndergraduatePerformance at Identifying Ethical Concerns in IEEE Case StudiesDr. Todd Freeborn, The University of Alabama Todd Freeborn, PhD, is an associate professor with the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at The University of Alabama. Through NSF funding, he has coordinated REU Sites for engineering students to explore renewable resources and speech pathology. He is also the coordinator for an NSF S-STEM program to prepare students for gateway courses across different disciplines of engineering to support and retain students in
Conference Session
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Jeff R. Brown, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach; Taylor Joy Mitchell, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach; Chad Rohrbacher, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach; Leroy Long III, Sinclair Community College
Tagged Topics
NSF Grantees Poster Session
Paper ID #43353Board 371: Research Initiation: Expanding the Boundaries of Ethical Reasoningand Professional Responsibility in Engineering Education Through CriticalNarrativeDr. Jeff R. Brown, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach Jeff Brown is a professor of civil engineering at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, FL. His research interests include ethics and professional formation in engineering education, service learning, and structural health monitoring of reinforced concrete structures. Dr. Brown received his PhD in structural engineering from the University of Florida in 2005.Taylor Joy
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 24
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Bradley J. Sottile, The Pennsylvania State University
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
EthicsIntroductionIt is well accepted by both engineering education practitioners and researchers that developingethical engineers is critical for preparing engineering students to meet the obligations ofprofessional practice upon entering the workforce. Yet despite changing society contexts, and inan era where active changes are being seen in post-secondary engineering students (e.g., Sottileet al., 2021; Sottile, Cruz, & McLain, 2022) engineering ethics education largely looks the sameas it did a generation ago. This paper re-examines the question of engineering ethics educationwith an eye towards evaluating how students and faculty respond to relatively modernengineering ethical situations.Literature ReviewA Case for Case StudiesAs Martin, Conlon, and
Collection
2024 South East Section Meeting
Authors
Brian Aufderheide, Hampton University; LaNika M. Barnes, Albemarle County Public Schools (Charlottesville, Virginia); Otsebele E Nare, Hampton University; Garrick E. Louis, University of Virginia; Daniel Webster Fairley II, 100 Black Men of Central Virginia
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Engineering Education, 2024 Ethics Case Study Project: Broadening STEM Participation by Normalizing Immersion of Diverse Groups in Peer to Near Peer CollaborationsAbstractTo successfully broaden the participation of underrepresented racially minoritized students inscience, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), students from all demographic groups mustroutinely work together in STEM as a cohesive community. A Mutual Benefit Approach (MBA)is a way to create longstanding partnerships between members of the community, academia, non-governmental organizations (NGO) to develop equitable opportunities for students from alldemographic groups to engage together in STEM. One of the primary objectives for MBA is toprovide a continuous series of
Collection
2023 ASEE Midwest Section Conference
Authors
Kristine Q. Loh; Moumita Dasgupta
2023 ASEE Midwest Section Conference The Forces of Stage Design: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Teaching Normal Force, Frictional Force, and Design Ethics for non-STEM Majors Kristine Q. Loh1 and Moumita Dasgupta2 1 Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 2 Department of Physics, Augsburg University, Minneapolis, MNAbstractThis paper presents an innovative lecture and lab for teaching the concepts of normal andfrictional force to non-STEM majors through a design activity centered on raked, or inclined,stages. This joint lecture and lab suited a three
Collection
2024 CIEC
Authors
Mark Pagano; Lorne Arnold; Heather Dillon
ETD 505 Starting from Scratch: Designing an Engineering Ethics Course to Help Meet ABET Outcomes and the University of Washington’s “W” (Writing) Course Designation Mark A. Pagano, Lorne Arnold, and Heather Dillon University of Washington TacomaAbstractOne common experience for almost every engineering and engineering technology educator ishaving the opportunity to assist in preparing your home program for an upcoming ABET visit orfor some other form of internal university program review. This is a common shared experiencefor all of us; however, it is rarer when one
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 1
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Campbell R. Bego, University of Louisville; Tessa Withorn, University of Louisville; Judith Danovitch, University of Louisville; Angela Thompson P.E., University of Louisville; Elisabeth Thomas, University of Louisville; Gabriel Ethan Gatsos, University of Louisville; Alvin Tran, University of Louisville
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
Paper ID #43356Working Towards GenAI Literacy: Assessing First-Year Engineering Students’Attitudes towards, Trust in, and Ethical Opinions of ChatGPTDr. Campbell R. Bego, University of Louisville Campbell Rightmyer Bego, PhD, PE, studies learning and retention in undergraduate engineering programs in the Department of Engineering Fundamentals at the University of Louisville’s Speed School of Engineering. She obtained a BS from Columbia University in Mechanical Engineering, a PE license in Mechanical Engineering from the state of New York, and an MS and PhD in Cognitive Science from the University of Louisville. Her current
Collection
2022 CIEC
Authors
Helen McNally
ETD 335 Nanoethics, It is Not Small in Magnitude Helen A. McNally Purdue UniversityAbstractThis work in progress presents the implementation of nanoethics learning. The introduction ofnanotechnology into an engineering technology program is explained briefly. The ideas ofnanotechnology and ethical concerns are introduced in two courses (graduate andundergraduate.) This paper focuses on the on the nanoethics portion of the courses includingassignments, readings, and class sessions. A set of questions for nanoethics is presented alongwith
Conference Session
Cultivating Community, Wellness, and Character Development
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Victoria E Goodrich, University of Notre Dame
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering Division (ChED)
research focuses on student belonging in engineering classrooms, hands-on learning, and team/group dynamics. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Material and Energy Balances AND Character Development: an investigation of student responses to intentional virtue education in a traditional chemical engineering courseAbstractEngineering education has long held that along with cultivating engineers with solid technicalskills, programs must also develop students to be safe, ethical, and community engagedprofessionals. This has been emphasized time and again through professional organizationsacross all engineering disciplines and within the ABET accreditation structure
Conference Session
Accountability and Stewardship
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Benjamin J. Laugelli, University of Virginia
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
Paper ID #43681Frankenstein Lives! Teaching Mary Shelley’s Novel in the Engineering ClassroomDr. Benjamin J. Laugelli, University of Virginia Dr. Laugelli is an Assistant Professor of Engineering and Society at the University of Virginia. He teaches courses that consider social and ethical aspects of technology and engineering practice. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Frankenstein Lives! Teaching Mary Shelley’s Novel in the Engineering ClassroomIntroductionMary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein, widely regarded as the first work of modern science-fiction
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 19
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Elizabeth Ann Strehl, University of Michigan; Sabrina Olson, University of Michigan; Corin L. Bowen, California State University, Los Angeles; Aaron W. Johnson, University of Michigan
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
students’understanding of ethical dilemmas in aerospace engineering. Macroethics is particularly relevantwithin the aerospace industry as engineers are often asked to grapple with multi-faceted issuessuch as sustainable aviation, space colonization, or the military industrial complex. Macroethicaleducation, the teaching of collective social responsibility within the engineering profession andsocietal decisions about technology, is traditionally left out of undergraduate engineeringcurricula. This lack of macroethics material leaves students underprepared to address the broaderimpacts of their discipline on society. Including macroethical content in the classroom helpsnovice engineers better understand the real implications of their work on humanity
Conference Session
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI) Technical Session 10
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Lawrence E. Whitman, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; Kristin Dutcher Mann, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; Amar Shireesh Kanekar, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; Albert L Baker, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; Srikanth B Pidugu P.E., University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Tagged Divisions
Multidisciplinary Engineering Division (MULTI)
disciplines, were presented with information on issues related to the ethicaluse of LLMs for class assignments. The primary research question was: “What are students’perceptions of the ethical use of LLMs in college coursework?”The research employs a mixed-methods approach. The survey of student attitudes concerning theethical use of LLMs was conducted in courses from six different academic disciplines –engineering technology, computer science, political science, chemistry, health education andhistory – during the fall 2023 semester. Both quantitative data and qualitative responses on thesame survey, designed to be given before and after a short learning module, were collected, aswas a student assignment. Since the research centers on student
Conference Session
Safety and Sustainability in the ChE Classroom
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Adam T Melvin, Clemson University; Michael J. Ardoline, Louisiana State University and A&M College
Tagged Divisions
Chemical Engineering Division (ChED)
and Biomolecular Engineering at Clemson University in the fall of 2023.Michael J. Ardoline, Louisiana State University and A&M College ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024Development of a learning module to teach chemical engineering students aboutmoral reasoning in the context of process safety.AbstractIncorporating ethics and ethical decision-making into the chemical engineering curriculum hasalways been a challenge given that much of this theory is covered outside of engineering, usuallyin philosophy departments. Nevertheless, moral reasoning has been a component of ABETevaluations for years which means that we need to identify how we can teach and assess therelevant components. Recent work
Collection
2024 ASEE PSW Conference
Authors
Daniel Marchant, USC Viterbi School of Engineering; Danny Marchant, University of Southern California
-sea exploration resulted in poor ethical standards. The Titan alsoserves as a modern parallel to the ship it was intent on exploring; the Titanic notoriously sankdue to an iceberg, as the ship had been poorly tested in rough conditions. In the growing age ofextreme adventures, OceanGate's lack of proper testing and overconfidence in its engineeringresulted in a culture that was socially responsive to meet demand but lacking in socialresponsibility. Ethical standards must be established and enforced for start-ups who push theenvelope in extreme environments to foster a spirit that emphasizes discovery while prioritizingsafety. Additionally, countries must collaborate to ensure basic, proper regulations can beenforced in international spaces
Collection
15th Annual First-Year Engineering Experience Conference (FYEE)
Authors
Angela Jin Sadlowski, The Johns Hopkins University; Eileen Haase PhD, The Johns Hopkins University; Gyeongtae Sun Moon, The Johns Hopkins University; Meera R Bhat, The Johns Hopkins University
, introducingthe core principles of engineering, design, and health inequity. At the beginning of the semester,the BMED students (n = 126) are randomized and placed into groups of five students. Eachgroup is assigned to an LM enrolled in the Effective Teaching and Management of EngineeringTeams course. As the BMED course continues, these LMs are crucial in guiding their first-yearBME teams through engineering and design modules such as the Cardiovascular System,Arduino, Ethics, and Health Inequity Project. Since BMED follows a group-based, flipped,active-learning mode of engineering education, the LMs are vital in mentoring the BMEDstudents. From survey results of previous years, LMs required skills in conflict management,assessment design, ethics, group
Conference Session
Computing and Information Technology Division (CIT) Technical Session 3
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Sharifa Alghowinem, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Aikaterini Bagiati, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Andrés F. Salazar-Gómez, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Cynthia Breazeal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Tagged Divisions
Computing and Information Technology Division (CIT)
adoption in theirworkplace, address its ethical implications, and enable better communication about AI initiativeswithin the organization. It also demystifies the technology, and ensures leaders can responsiblynavigate AI-driven changes.Most AI-related courses mainly focus on teaching programming languages and handling big data.A closer look at AI adult education reveals gaps and limitations in content suitable forprofessional adults – e.g in leadership, decision-making, ethics, governance and cultural aspectsof organizational change. Furthermore, AI education pedagogy for adult learners,is stillunderstudied. Literature suggests that adults are self-directed, experience-based learners.Therefore, their learning should involve self-planning
Conference Session
Wellness, Readiness, and Thriving
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Julianna Gesun, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University; Rachel Eve Gail Swan, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University; Bryan Watson, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
emergencetheory. The goal of this section is to guide and ground our systematized literature review withinthe broader context.A Primer on Interdisciplinary Perspectives to Micro-Meso-Macro Perspectives (Levels)To understand Micro-thriving, Meso-thriving, and Macro-thriving, it is important to firstacknowledge the distinctions between the terms “Micro,” “Meso,” and “Macro”, and therelationships among these terms. The distinctions between Micro, Meso, and Macro have beenwidely acknowledged in engineering ethics and related fields such as economics, sociology, andpsychology, as they provide a framework for analyzing ethical considerations at varying levels ofscale and influence within complex systems [12], [13], [14]. The Micro-Level pertains toindividuals
Conference Session
Accountability and Stewardship
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Gail Baura, Loyola University, Chicago; Matt Miller, Loyola University, Chicago
Tagged Divisions
Liberal Education/Engineering & Society Division (LEES)
justice and vocational psychologies and in recent years has examined the social cognitive factors that explain social justice and engineering engagement. ©American Society for Engineering Education, 2024 Do Social Justice Case Studies Affect Engineering Professional Responsibility?IntroductionEngineers solve complex problems that incorporate specific constraints, including cost, time,federal regulation, racial and economic disparities, and political power. As we train ourundergraduate students to solve these problems, it is required by ABET Student Outcome (4) thatwe provide them with “an ability to recognize ethical and professional responsibilities inengineering
Conference Session
Student Division (STDT) Poster Session
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Tahlia Altgold, The Ohio State University
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Tagged Divisions
Student Division (STDT)
equal partners in the engineering process, rather than people theengineers are ‘helping’. Following these two pillars, ethical and empathetic decision making are the thirdpillar, encouraging engineers to base decisions beyond traditional resource justifications, such as cost andtime. Howcroft et al. emphasize that these pillars need to be continuously integrated over the course of adegree program to be impactful.Figure 1: Empathy models adapted from their source literature on a continuum from decontextualized tocontext-driven.DiscussionEach model reflects the context in which it was created and can each aid engineering educators inimplementing empathy in their curricula. Zaki’s [6] model developed by a psychologist, is the mostdecontextualized
Collection
2024 South East Section Meeting
Authors
Eva Theresa Singleton, The Citadel Military College
Tagged Topics
Diversity
Baker publishedby Cengage Learning. The PMBOK ® Guide – Seventh Edition is a supplemental text for thiscourse.From a non-technical perspective, the course highlights the importance of ethical behaviorsthroughout the course and in the Week 14 lecture entitled Project Ethics. The ProjectManagement Institute requires that project practitioners follow the Project Management Institute(PMI) Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct. The code of ethics provides guidance for moralbehaviors distinguishing right from wrong, and good from bad, not strategy, stewardship, andmanaging change in dynamic environments [1]. The code of ethics promotes the values ofresponsibility, respect, fairness, and honesty which complement the principles [1], but goodmorals
Conference Session
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM) Technical Session 22
Collection
2024 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
Authors
Mohammad Faraz Sajawal, University of Oklahoma; Javeed Kittur, University of Oklahoma
Tagged Divisions
Educational Research and Methods Division (ERM)
ChatGPT evolving in the future andwhat impact do you think it will have on education? (3) What ethical considerations should beconsidered when using ChatGPT in an educational setting? and (4) Can ChatGPT promote criticalthinking and problem-solving skills in students? Why?The responses were coded using NVivo to examine the perceptions of engineering students usingChatGPT. A total of 269 responses were included in the analysis. The responses revealed diverseviewpoints on the future of ChatGPT in education, examining its potential impact on teaching andlearning. While advancements are anticipated, ethical concerns like privacy, academic integrityand equitable access surfaced as significant issues. Opinions on ChatGPT’s role in boosting