| Literature DB >> 34882277 |
Jae Hoon Lim1, Brittany D Hunt2, Nickcoy Findlater3, Peter T Tkacik3, Jerry L Dahlberg3.
Abstract
This paper explores how undergraduate students understood the social relevance of their engineering course content knowledge and drew (or failed to draw) broader social and ethical implications from that knowledge. Based on a three-year qualitative study in a junior-level engineering class, we found that students had difficulty in acknowledging the social and ethical aspects of engineering as relevant topics in their coursework. Many students considered the immediate technical usability or improved efficiency of technical innovations as the noteworthy social and ethical implications of engineering. Findings suggest that highly-structured engineering programs leave little room for undergraduate students to explore the ethical dimension of engineering content knowledge and interact with other students/programs on campus to expand their "technically-minded" perspective. We discussed the issues of the "culture of disengagement" (Cech, Sci Technol Human Values 39(1):42-72, 2014) fueled by disciplinary elitism, spatial distance, and insulated curriculum prevalent in the current structure of engineering programs. We called for more conscious effort by engineering educators to offer meaningful interdisciplinary engagement opportunities and in-class conversations on ethics that support engineering students' holistic intellectual growth and well-rounded professional ethics.Entities:
Keywords: Engineering ethics; Qualitative research; Undergraduate students
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34882277 PMCID: PMC8660727 DOI: 10.1007/s11948-021-00355-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Eng Ethics ISSN: 1353-3452 Impact factor: 3.525
Percentages of categories in focus groups and reflective journal writing
| Category | N (FG)* | % (FG) | Sub- categories | # of quotes (FG)* | # of students (RJW)** | % (RJW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microethics I: pragmatic usability | 14 | 87.5% | Technical usability | 45 | 20 | 28.2 |
| Career-wise usability | 30 | 25 | 35.2 | |||
| Microethics II: technical efficiency | 11 | 68.6% | 13 | 6 | 8.4 | |
| Emerging macroethics | 13 | 81.2% | Humanitarian value | 17 | 4 | 5.5 |
| Positive contribution to society | 22 | 9 | 12.7 | |||
| Engineering ethics and perspective change | 16 | 21 | 29.5 | |||
| Apathy and disregard | 11 | 68.7% | Apathy and disregard | 16 | 29 | 40.8 |
| No perspective change | 2 | 27 | 38.0 | |||
| Technically minded people | 6 | 0 | 0 | |||
| Searching for why: critical questioning | 7 | 43.8% | 18 | 2 | 2.8 |
*N(FG): Number of the focus groups showing the corresponding code/category at least once
**Frequency (FG): Number of all quotes coded in all 16 focus group transcripts
***N(RJW): Number of students whose reflective writing responses has the corresponding code