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The Ethics of Inquiry

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Title: The Ethics of Inquiry


1
The Ethics of Inquiry
  • An introduction to ethical issues in the
    Scholarship of Teaching and Learning

2
Case study
  • A sociology instructor wishes to evaluate a new
    teaching method
  • Experimental new teaching method small group
    seminars, no formal lecture, independent study,
    plus hes readily available for consultation
  • Has 2 sections of Soc 100, 30 students each
  • One section will be the subjects, one controls
  • Switch subjects controls at mid-quarter
  • Both groups take same quizzes, exams have same
    paper assignments
  • Im sorta hoping you wont, of course, but
    everyone is free to quit the experiment any time
  • Measures quizzes, exams, papers

3
Case study
  • What potential issues/problems can you see with
    this proposed study?
  • How many potential problems can we can find

4
Case study
  • Could most of these problems be corrected?
  • Yes. Part of an IRBs job is to help identify
    and fix issues like these

5
A Little History
  • Nuremberg Doctors Trial (1946-47)
  • Hypothermia survivability and effects
  • Bone healing
  • High altitude survivability and effects
  • Potability of treated sea water
  • How to effectively sterilize
  • Chemical burn effects
  • How quickly poison bullets kill
  • Typhus vaccine
  • Twins studies
  • http//www.ushmm.org/research/doctors/

6
History
  • Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-72)
  • Several hundred black men in Macon County, AL
  • Originally a treatment/study (mercury rubs)
  • Subjects not informed when treatment stopped
  • Became Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in
    the Negro Male
  • (Werent actually untreated, though)
  • Penicillin available as treatment in 1943
  • Provisions were taken to prevent Tuskegee
    subjects from getting penicillin
  • Formal apology (president Clinton) in 1997
  • http//www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/may97/tuskeg
    ee_5-16.html

7
History
  • Willowbrook hepatitis studies
  • Institution for mentally defective persons
  • Infecting retarded children with hepatitis (fed
    feces)
  • Theyll get hepatitis anyhow. Better under
    controlled conditions.
  • To study the course of hepatitis
  • Vaccine studies
  • Mid 1950s to early 70s

8
History
  • Human radiation studies (100s) 1944-74
  • Several psychological/sociological studies
  • Milgram, obedience to authority,1967
  • http//learningat.ke7.org.uk/socialsciences/Psycho
    logy/PsyRes13/Milgram.htm
  • Zimbardo prison experiment at Stanford, 1971

9
Ethics Codes
  • The Nuremberg Code, 1947
  • The Belmont Report, 1979, written in response to
    the exposé of both the Tuskegee Syphilis Study
    and U.S. human radiation experiments

10
Ethics Codes
  • World Medical Association Declaration of
    Helsinki Ethical Principles for Medical Research
    Involving Human Subjects (1964,75, 83,89,
    96,2000, 2002)
  • WHO/CIOMS International Ethical Guidelines for
    Biomedical Research Involving Human Subjects

11
Informed Consent
  • 1. The voluntary consent of the human subject is
    absolutely essential.
  • This means that the person involved should have
    legal capacity to give consent should be so
    situated as to be able to exercise free power of
    choice, without the intervention of any element
    of force, fraud, deceit, duress, overreaching, or
    other ulterior form of constraint or coercion,
    and should have sufficient knowledge and
    comprehension of the elements of the subject
    matter involved as to enable him to make an
    understanding and enlightened decision. This
    latter element requires that before the
    acceptance of an affirmative decision by the
    experimental subject there should be made known
    to him the nature, duration, and purpose of the
    experiment the method and means by which it is
    to be conducted all inconveniences and hazards
    reasonably to be expected and the effects upon
    his health or person which may possibly come from
    his participation in the experiment.
  • Nuremberg Code, paragraph 1

12
Informed Consent-2
  • This means that the person involved should have
    legal capacity to give consent
  • should be so situated as to be able to exercise
    free power of choice, without the intervention of
    any element of force, fraud, deceit, duress,
    overreaching, or other ulterior form of
    constraint or coercion
  • should have sufficient knowledge and
    comprehension of the elements of the subject
    matter involved as to enable him to make an
    understanding and enlightened decision.

13
Informed Consent-3
  • This latter element requires that before the
    acceptance of an affirmative decision by the
    experimental subject there should be made known
    to him
  • the nature, duration, and purpose of the
    experiment
  • the method and means by which it is to be
    conducted
  • all inconveniences and hazards reasonably to be
    expected and
  • the effects upon his health or person which may
    possibly come from his participation in the
    experiment

14
A few ethical principles
  • Privacy
  • Autonomy
  • Informed consent
  • risk/benefit (burdens/benefits)
  • to subjects
  • to society
  • vulnerable populations
  • truthfulness

15
Operative Ethical Principles
  • The main operative principles mostly come down
    to
  • Informed Consent
  • Privacy
  • Confidentiality
  • protecting vulnerable populations

16
Fundamental Ethical Principles
  • Respect for persons
  • recognition of the personal dignity and autonomy
    of individuals and special protection for those
    with diminished autonomy
  • Beneficence ( PNN)
  • obligation to protect persons from harm by
    maximizing anticipated benefits and minimizing
    possible risks of harm
  • Justice
  • fairness in the distribution of research benefits
    and burdens

17
Laws
  • Federal Regulations (45 CFR 46)
  • In 1974, Congress passed the National Research
    Act, which created the National Commission for
    the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical
    and Behavioral Research. The National Commission
    wrote the Belmont Report, which provided the
    foundation for current federal regulations to
    protect human research subjects. The National
    Research Act required the government to publish
    regulations for the ethical treatment of human
    subjects, including obtaining informed consent,
    and called for oversight of research by
    Institutional Review Boards (IRBs).

18
SoTL the IRB
  • students as human subjects
  • Students as learners and subjects
  • clinician/researcher teacher/researcher
    conflicts
  • IRB Levels of Review
  • Full review
  • expedited review
  • exempt

19
Students as subjects
  • A few potential issues

20
Students as subjects-1
  • students are convenient, inexpensive and easy to
    recruit
  • potential coercion or undue influence (future
    courses, letters of recommendation, etc)
  • paying/compensating subjects (is giving course
    credit coercive?)
  • some college students are minors (state law
    applies)
  • confidentiality (extra care is required in a
    college community IRBs should ask how names and
    data will be kept separate

21
Students as subjects-2
  • Informed consent requires time to consider the
    request for participation (i.e.,informing and
    consent probably should not happen all in one
    class period)
  • Subjects must be free to withdraw from a study at
    any time (if the research is part of an ongoing
    course, how would a students withdrawal from a
    study affect their participation in the course?
    Course requirements?)

22
Students as subjects-3
  • Requests to participate in a research project
    have less chance of being coercive or having
    undue influence if the request is less direct
    (made by someone other than the instructor?)
  • Need to be concerned about students with
    physical, psychological or developmental
    disabilities
  • If a research project is about a specific course
    and group of students, could subjects be
    considered identifiable? (affects whether a
    study would be exempt, or would require expedited
    or full review)

23
Potential risks-1
  • Possible risks to student subjectsinclude the
    following
  • Breach of confidentiality, whether actual or
    potential
  • Violation of privacy, even when confidentiality
    is assured
  • Validation of inappropriate or undesirable
    behaviors of subjects, perhaps based on
    misunderstanding of the researchers intent

24
Potential risks-2
  • Presentation of results in a way that does not
    respect (or agree with) the subjects interests
  • Possible harm to individuals not directly
    involved in the research but about whom data are
    obtained indirectly (secondary subjects), or who
    do not belong to the class or group from which
    subjects were selected
  • Harm to subjects dignity, self-image, or
    innocence as a result of indiscreet or
    age-inappropriate questions in an interview or
    questionnaire
  • - Robert Amdur and Elizabeth Bankert,
    Institutional Review Board Management and
    Function, Jones and Bartlett, 2002 (pp 403-04)

25
Setting up NSCCs IRB
  • IRBs goals purpose
  • Procedures
  • Getting started

26
IRB Mission Goals
  • To protect safety, rights and welfare of human
    subjects (the ethical imperative)
  • Regulatory compliance with 45 CFR 46 (the legal
    imperative)

27
IRB Procedures
  • Procedures for SoTL proposals governed by 45 CFR
    46 ( RCW?) and ethics codes
  • To be established and formalized by the initial
    group of IRB members

28
Getting the IRB started
  • Volunteers time commitment at beginning, less
    later
  • Training
  • Conferences (OHSU in May, etc)
  • Online trainings (Collaborative IRB Training
    Initiative)
  • Certification
  • Formalize policies and procedures

29
First Tasks
  • Develop an informational website
  • Templates
  • Materials
  • Readings
  • Announcements
  • Planning meetings online (in FirstClass)
  • Develop policies, procedures
  • Plan how best to help SoTL researchers

30
Questions?
  • Questions
  • Comments
  • Volunteers email tkerns_at_sccd.ctc.edu
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