DocumentCode
3485776
Title
Work in Progress - Engineering Courage: From “ Not My Business ” to Positive Responsibility
Author
Hashemian, G. ; Loui, M.C.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Illinois Univ. at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL
fYear
2005
fDate
19-22 Oct. 2005
Abstract
How does a course on engineering ethics affect an undergraduate student\´s feelings of responsibility and decisions about moral problems? Can an ethics course promote moral courage? In this study, we interviewed six students who had taken a course on engineering ethics and six who had not. We asked what they would do as participants in two short cases that posed moral problems. For each case, we successively increased the level of seriousness and asked how each change altered the students\´ decisions. For both cases, even when they were not directly involved, students who had taken the ethics course were more likely to feel responsible and take corrective action. Students who were less successful in the ethics course gave answers similar to students who had not taken the course. This latter group of students seemed to have weaker feelings of responsibility: they would say that a problem was "not my business"
Keywords
educational courses; engineering education; ethical aspects; engineering courage; engineering ethics; ethics course; moral courage; positive responsibility; Code standards; Engineering profession; Ethics; Hazards; Instruments; Product safety; Protocols; Remuneration; Springs; assessment; engineering ethics; professional responsibility;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Frontiers in Education, 2005. FIE '05. Proceedings 35th Annual Conference
Conference_Location
Indianopolis, IN
ISSN
0190-5848
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9077-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FIE.2005.1612270
Filename
1612270
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