| Literature DB >> 35652979 |
Yiyang Gao1, Jasmin Wilson1, Patricia Ann Mabrouk2.
Abstract
In the United States National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health have mandated training STEM doctoral students in the ethical and responsible conduct of research to improve doctoral students' ethical decision-making skills; however, little is known about the process and factors that STEM faculty and graduate students use in their decision-making. This exploratory case study examined how four triads of chemistry faculty and their doctoral students recruited from three research universities in the eastern United States engaged in ethical decision-making on issues of authorship, assignment of credit, and plagiarism. A mixed-methods approach involving the administration of an online survey consisting of three open-ended case studies followed by a think-aloud interview was utilized. Participants were found to use analogical reasoning and base their decision-making on a common core set of considerations including fundamental principles, social contracts, consequences, and discussion with an advisor, often using prior personal experiences as sources. Co-authorship did not appear to impact the doctoral students' ethical decision-making. Gender may play a role in graduate students' decision-making; female doctoral students appeared to be less likely to consider prior experiences when evaluating the vignettes. Graduate students' lack of knowledge of the core issues in the responsible conduct of research, coupled with their lack of research experience, and inability to identify the core considerations may lead them to make bad judgments in specific situations. Our findings help explain the minimal impact that the current responsible conduct of research training methods has had on graduate students' ethical decision-making and should lead to the development of more effective approaches.Entities:
Keywords: Analogical reasoning; Authorship; Chemistry faculty; Doctoral students; Ethical decision-making; Research ethics; Responsible conduct of research
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35652979 PMCID: PMC9161763 DOI: 10.1007/s11948-022-00381-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Eng Ethics ISSN: 1353-3452 Impact factor: 3.777
Fig. 1Breakdown of the gender and ethnicity for study participants
Top three ethical decision-making considerations judged most important by the participants based on their survey and follow-up think aloud interviews
| Role | Faculty | Graduate student who has been published | Graduate student who has not yet been published | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | Male | Female | |||||||
| Triad 1 | Scenario | First choice | Second choice | Third choice | First choice | Second choice | Third choice | First choice | Second choice | Third choice |
| 1 | Discuss with advisor | Fundamental principle | External entity requirements | Fundamental principle | Discuss with advisor | External entity requirements | Discuss with advisor | External entity requirements | ||
| 2 | Fundamental principle | Consequences | Discuss with advisor | Fundamental principle | Consequences | External entity requirements | Fundamental principle | Discuss with advisor | External entity requirements | |
| 3 | Fundamental principle | Consequences | Discuss with advisor | Fundamental principle | Consequences | If anyone has been in this position | Discuss with advisor | Fundamental principle | Consequences | |
"Consequences" is an abbreviation for the item "If student doesn't speak up then student won't get the credit they deserve for their work on the paper" (Scenario 1) and the item "If student doesn't speak up then there could be serious repercussions." (Scenarios 2 and 3)
"Discuss with advisor" is an abbreviation for the item "It is important to learn how to discuss important issues with one's advisor"
"Fundamental principle" is an abbreviation for the item “A fundamental principle is involved, specifically, the first author usually does most of the work on the paper" (Scenario 1) and the item "A fundamental principle is involved, specifically, paraphrasing is a form of plagiarism and is unacceptable" (Scenarios 2 and 3)
"External entity requirements" is an abbreviation for the item "Every journal has authorship requirements" (Scenario 1), “Every funding agency takes issues involving falsification, fabrication, and plagiarism (FFP) seriously” (Scenario 2), and "Every graduate course has final deadlines" (Scenario 3)
"If anyone has been in this position" is an abbreviation for the item "Student needs to find out if anyone else in the lab has been in this position"
"New social contract" is an abbreviation for the item "The situation has changed so a new social contract should be negotiated between advisor and student"
Participants use of personal experience when evaluating ethical scenarios exploring issues of authorship and plagiarism
| Triad | Scenario | Faculty | Grad published | Grad unpublished |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | Male | Female | |
| 1 | 1 | Yes, discuss with advisor | Yes, discuss with advisor and external entity requirements | No |
| 2 | Yes, not specific to item | No | No | |
| 3 | Yes, not specific to item | Yes, consequences | No | |
Participants’ Consideration of “Reputation” when sharing their reasoning during the think-aloud interview
| Triad | Scenario | Faculty | Grad published | Grad unpublished |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | Male | Female | |
| 1 | 1 | No | No | No |
| 2 | Yes | Yes | No | |
| 3 | No | No | No | |
Fig. 2Proposed model for ethical decision-making on issues of authorship and plagiarism
| Opening Statement: | Thank you for agreeing to participate. Your participation is very important to me as we seek to understand how chemistry faculty and graduate students engage in ethical decision-making on issues related to the responsible conduct of research Before we begin, I would like you to take a moment and review the informed consent form. I am providing you with two copies. One that I would like you to sign and return to me and a second that you may keep *Interviewers turn on recorder* |
| Directions for Think-Aloud | Your participation today is confidential. Your responses will not be associated with you in any way. All data will be anonymized and analyzed, and reported in aggregate. If at any point you decide that you would like to withdraw from participation, just let me know What we are going to do now is to provide you with a copy of your answers to the online survey you completed. What I want you to do is to work through the survey with me “thinking-out-loud” so that I can understand the reasoning process you used in selecting your answers Please know that this is not a test. Your performance is not being evaluated. There are no right or wrong answers to the survey questions. If you have any questions about the survey questions, if something is unclear, please ask. As you read and work your way through the survey, I would like you to discuss your thoughts and reasoning out loud. Pretend as best as you can that I am not here. Do you have any questions so far? Let’s get started |
| Hand out the mentor or protégé interview script | As the participant works through the script, I will prompt, echo, and summarize the participant’s dialog asking questions as needed to capture their thoughts and experience working through the survey. Representative questions might include: Can you tell me what you are thinking? Describe the steps you are going through here |
| General questions | After the participant has worked through the survey, I will ask some general questions to gauge the clarity and accuracy of the wording. My conversation with the participant will likely look something like the following: Now that you have worked your way through the interview script, I have several questions I would like to ask you · So, what did you think of the survey and our interview? · Have you participated in any research ethics training as a part of your Ph.D. studies? · How easy or difficult, on a scale of 1–10, ten being most difficult and one being easiest, was it to answer the questions? · What was the easiest scenario to evaluate? Why do you think you found this scenario the easiest? · What scenario was the most challenging to evaluate? Why do you think you found this scenario the most difficult? Based on our earlier discussion, it may be necessary to revisit certain questions. The types of questions and wording I would likely use would look something like this: · I noticed it took you a long time to work through question ____. Can we return to this question and discuss it further? · I noticed question _____ caused some confusion. Can we go back and review the wording of this question so I can improve the wording · I noticed the word __________ caused some confusion, what do you think would be a better word? · Well, that’s the end of the formal part of our think-aloud. I would like to know if you feel that you learned anything by participating in our study. What did you learn? |
| Closing Statement | Your comments and insights are very important to me. Once again, I would like to thank you for your time and participation in our study |