@inproceedings{10.1145/3408877.3432449,
    Abstract = {As ethical questions around the development of contemporary computer technologies have become an increasing point of public and political concern, computer science departments in universities around the world have placed renewed emphasis on tech ethics undergraduate classes as a means to educate students on the large-scale social implications of their actions. Committed to the idea that tech ethics is an essential part of the undergraduate computer science educational curriculum, at Rice University this year we piloted a redesigned version of our Ethics and Accountability in Computer Science class. This effort represents our first attempt at implementing a "deep" tech ethics approach to the course. Incorporating elements from philosophy of technology, critical media theory, and science and technology studies, we encouraged students to learn not only ethics in a "shallow" sense, examining abstract principles or values to determine right and wrong, but rather looking at a series of "deeper" questions more closely related to present issues of social justice and relying on a structural understanding of these problems to develop potential sociotechnical solutions. In this article, we report on our implementation of this redesigned approach. We describe in detail the rationale and strategy for implementing this approach, present key elements of the redesigned syllabus, and discuss final student reflections and course evaluations. To conclude, we examine course achievements, limitations, and lessons learned toward the future, particularly in regard to the number escalating social protests and issues involving Covid-19.},
    Address = {New York, NY, USA},
    Author = {Ferreira, Rodrigo and Vardi, Moshe Y.},
    BookTitle = {Proceedings of the 52nd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education},
    File = {Deep Tech Ethics - 3408877.3432449 - x - x - x.pdf},
    ISBN = {9781450380621},
    Keywords = {fake news, criminal justice, sharing platforms, ethics, social justice, computers},
    Location = {Virtual Event, USA},
    Pages = {1041--1047},
    Publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
    Series = {SIGCSE '21},
    Title = {Deep Tech Ethics: An Approach to Teaching Social Justice in Computer Science},
    URL = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3408877.3432449},
    Year = {2021},
    bdsk-url-1 = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3408877.3432449},
    date-added = {2021-03-14 08:54:35 +0100},
    date-modified = {2021-03-14 08:54:35 +0100},
    numpages = {7},
    doi = {10.1145/3408877.3432449}
}

@inproceedings{10.1145/3408877.3432449, Abstract = {As ethical questions around the development of contemporary computer technologies have become an increasing point of public and political concern, computer science departments in universities around the world have placed renewed emphasis on tech ethics undergraduate classes as a means to educate students on the large-scale social implications of their actions. Committed to the idea that tech ethics is an essential part of the undergraduate computer science educational curriculum, at Rice University this year we piloted a redesigned version of our Ethics and Accountability in Computer Science class. This effort represents our first attempt at implementing a "deep" tech ethics approach to the course. Incorporating elements from philosophy of technology, critical media theory, and science and technology studies, we encouraged students to learn not only ethics in a "shallow" sense, examining abstract principles or values to determine right and wrong, but rather looking at a series of "deeper" questions more closely related to present issues of social justice and relying on a structural understanding of these problems to develop potential sociotechnical solutions. In this article, we report on our implementation of this redesigned approach. We describe in detail the rationale and strategy for implementing this approach, present key elements of the redesigned syllabus, and discuss final student reflections and course evaluations. To conclude, we examine course achievements, limitations, and lessons learned toward the future, particularly in regard to the number escalating social protests and issues involving Covid-19.}, Address = {New York, NY, USA}, Author = {Ferreira, Rodrigo and Vardi, Moshe Y.}, BookTitle = {Proceedings of the 52nd ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education}, File = {Deep Tech Ethics - 3408877.3432449 - x - x - x.pdf}, ISBN = {9781450380621}, Keywords = {fake news, criminal justice, sharing platforms, ethics, social justice, computers}, Location = {Virtual Event, USA}, Pages = {1041--1047}, Publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, Series = {SIGCSE '21}, Title = {Deep Tech Ethics: An Approach to Teaching Social Justice in Computer Science}, URL = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3408877.3432449}, Year = {2021}, bdsk-url-1 = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3408877.3432449}, date-added = {2021-03-14 08:54:35 +0100}, date-modified = {2021-03-14 08:54:35 +0100}, numpages = {7}, doi = {10.1145/3408877.3432449} }

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