Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

UI creates interactive online ethics resource

The UI has announced a new interactive online resource to help researchers and professionals in the sciences, engineering and mathematics incorporate ethical practices into their professional lives.

Ethics CORE, funded by the National Science Foundation, gathers and disseminates ethics resources, including educational curricula and online courses, reference materials, scholarly and research literature and resources available for use in Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR) education required by NSF and other funders of research. In addition, the site’s interactive community offers a place where users can publish and share scholarship, discuss ethics-related issues for professionals and researchers and develop and share new course offerings.

“From the outset, our goal has been to create a dynamic, one-stop environment where people can collaborate and discuss ethical questions and issues that arise on a daily basis,” said C.K. Gunsalus, the director of the National Center for Professional and Research Ethics, which has developed Ethics CORE. NCPRE is part of the UI’s Coordinated Science Laboratory.

“Ethics CORE aims to help people seamlessly integrate ethics into their daily behavior by providing a toolbox of resources to meet their varied needs,” she said.

A beta test version of the site, which went live in 2011, has attracted nearly 900 registered users from across the world.

Users are encouraged to share resources that they have developed, and researchers from around the country have contributed resources from videos to role-playing activities. An additional 300 people at a range of institutions are taking specialized RCR courses developed at the University of Washington. In addition, instructors at Arizona State University and Rochester Institute of Technology have taught a multi-institution suite of courses on sustainability ethics using custom multiuser games and simulation exercises that have all been deposited on the Ethics CORE site.

The search functions are powered by some of the world’s most sophisticated search technology, much of which has been developed or enhanced at the UI.

Co-principal investigators include Taft Broome, Howard University (civil engineering); and from Illinois, Nicholas Burbules (education), Michael Loui (electrical and computer engineering), and William Mischo (University Library). NCPRE senior advisers are Rebecca Sandefur, Illinois (sociology and law); Ken Pimple, Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions (Indiana University); and Joan Sieber, Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics.

In addition, Ethics CORE collaborates with several partner institutes and organizations that contribute content and expertise to the project. They include the National Academy of Engineering, Howard University, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, the Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research organization and the UI Center for Professional Responsibility in Business and Society.

“As we seek to make unprecedented breakthroughs in the fields of science, mathematics and engineering, it’s important to continue weaving ethics into our behavior,” Gunsalus said. “Ethics CORE provides administrators, instructors, researchers, professionals and students with the resources they need to move us forward.”

Read Next

Expert Viewpoints Humanities Headshot of English professor and department head Justine S. Murison

At 250 years after Jane Austen’s birth, why do her novels remain so popular?

This week marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth — she was born Dec. 16, 1775 — and fans of her novels have been celebrating with tea parties, brunches and balls. Her novels — including “Sense and Sensibility,” “Pride and Prejudice” and “Emma” — enjoy immense popularity. They are the subject of numerous academic […]

Expert Viewpoints Headshot of Shannon Mason, standing outside in front of a tree and wearing a hot pink blazer.

What can we learn about our country’s origins from ‘The American Revolution’ documentary?

Filmmaker Ken Burns’ new documentary — a six-part series on the American Revolution — aired on PBS in November and is now streaming. The documentary describes the American Revolution as “a war for independence, a war of conquest, a civil war and a world war,” and it aims to provide “an expansive, evenhanded look at […]

Announcements Alma Mater statue

Illinois announces first dual-credit initiative, bringing courses directly to high school students

The Learning Accelerator initiative offers the university’s popular general education courses to high school students across Illinois in the form of dual credit — at no cost to those students.

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010