Group 1 Revised Proposal: E126

E126: Ethics in Engineering and Business

Fall 2014, 4 units

Lecture: MW 10:00-11:00AM, C220 Cheit Hall

Discussion: F 2:00-4:00PM, C220 Cheit Hall

 

Course Description

  • Rarely can we separate ethical questions into either the realm of business ethics or the realm of engineering ethics. Engineers are frequently put in positions that affect business and vice versa, but we either seldom consider ethical issues from both an engineering and business perspective or believe that business and engineering ethics are disparate. In this class we will consider both business ethics and engineering ethics in an attempt to create a system of values to help facilitate students in their future endeavors. This course takes a hands-on approach to understanding ethics through the use of case studies and discussions with representatives from industry.  Assignments include individual reflections on case studies. Students will be asked to analyze theses case studies from both an engineering and business perspective and make conclusions that try to satisfy both.

 

Prerequisites

  • E125 or Haas equivalent – application and analysis skills practiced in E125 will be highly emphasized and used in this class

 

Objectives

  • Analyze ethical issues from both a business and engineering viewpoint rather than just an engineering or just a business perspective

  • Understand compromises between business and engineering from an ethical perspective.

  • Practice communication and presentation skills (especially about technical subjects to a nontechnical audience)

  • Be able to identify ethical dilemmas and have a basic familiarity with approaching the problem

  • Recognize and become familiar with different ethical philosophies

  • Reflect upon the current role of ethics in the engineering and business industries and how it is effective or can be changed

  • Differentiate between responsibility to self, society, government

 

Logistics

  • Piazza will be our main course tool. You will be able to download course materials and announcements.

  • We will go field trip on 11/27. Let me know if you cannot attend on the day. I can provide alternative way to fulfill the requirement.

  • You must create an Edublogs account for this course. All of your assignments will be submitted on this platform. For convenience, we will link the edublogs to a Facebook group page, where students can see everything posted on the edublogs page. Any posts that students make on the Facebook group will also show up on the Edublogs website.

  • There is no textbook for this class, save the Earth!

 

Assignments and Evaluation

Participation (35%)

Each student is expected to attend all lectures and discussion unless previously discussed with the instructor. The main purpose of this course is to develop your communication skills; active participation will be required, especially during discussions on Fridays. Since there will be 50 students in the class, and we only have 2 hours of discussion per week, students may gain participation points by posting their ideas on their Edublogs or the Facebook group page. There will be a post after every discussion section for students to reply with their input on the topic covered during class.

Written Essay Responses (20%)

Throughout the school year, we will be watching two films (topic of films to be decided based upon student voting in the beginning of the semester) and a written response reflection will be required for one of the films. (Although not mandatory, you may choose to write a response on the other film as well and the highest grade between the two reflections will be counted)There will also be a written midterm where students will have to reflect upon the differences and similarities (if there are any) between managerial and engineering ethics and whether the two have the same expertise and responsibilities.

Case Study Report (25%)

Students will form a group of 4 students and research an ethical case study of their choice. Each student will analyze the decisions made during the dilemma from both an engineering and business managerial viewpoint and compare and contrast the two. Students will then create a 20 minute presentation discussing their findings and lead a discussion with the class.

Interview Report (20%)

Near the middle of the course, students will be required to conduct an interview with an industry personnel (preferably one that has a technical background and has transitioned into management or vice versa). A list of questions will be provided to help you start the conversation but it is completely up to you what you want to get out of the interview.

CPA Students

Students who are interested in taking the Certified Public Accounting Examinations upon graduation are required to take 10 units of Ethics Related courses in addition to their Accounting and Business Related Courses. The Haas School of Business currently offers 7 units that count towards your Ethics Related course work. Engineering 126 will allow student to fulfill their CPA Ethics requirements with a course that covers topics they may experience in their professions after graduation.

3 thoughts on “Group 1 Revised Proposal: E126

  1. Based on Mary’s comments

    Thoughts behind creating E126

    Course Description:
    Course Description explains the importances of this class. It contains the reason why E126 is different from E125. The major difference would be learning business and engineering ethics at the same time. In addition, we may assume people took E125 or equivalent courses from Hass, so we can focus more on application and analysis. However, E125 or equivalent courses are just recommended prerequisite; therefore, any student can take this class without any pressure.

    Objectives:
    The list of objectives would help clear goals of this class. In E125, we only try to think about what engineering ethical issues involved in; however, we can understand ethical issues if we consider both business and engineering perspectives.

    The students who will take this class:
    Any engineering major student who is required to take ethics classes and any Haas student who prepares for CPA exam and needs 3 more units ethics class to fulfill CPA exam requirement.
    The number of students per semester: 50 (the goal is 25 engineering students and 25 Haas students).
    For case study, we group up as 4. Each group has 2 from engineering and 2 from business.

    Why 4 units class?
    The reason why we set the class as 4 units is because we do not have enough discussion and presentation time for this class. GSIs will open discussion sections, it would be independent with what professor cover in lectures. In lecture hours, professor will cover the assigned reading material or invite guest speakers. On the other hand, half of the semester(6 weeks), GSIs will bring some ethical problems in discussion sections. Students will discuss the ethical problems in an hour and represent what they have discussed. We will hold 2 weeks for ethics movie. For cases study representation, we will have 2 group presentations per week. (2*5 = 10 groups).
    In E125, we do not have enough time to discuss (usually 5~10 minute after ethics in news) Also, we have structural problem when we have discussions.
    We decided to allot an extra hour to have longer presentation or more discussion time so that students have better understandings and analysis for ethical problems. In addition, we decided to hold classrooms in Haas. The classrooms are in semi-circular forms which we can have more effective discussions.

    16 weeks = 6 weeks discussions + 2 weeks ethics movie + 5 weeks presentation + 1 RRR week + 1 week spring break.

  2. Course materials:

    Reading:
    Royal academy of engineering – Engineering ethics in practice – full set of case studies
    Article – Some Business-Related Ethical Issues in Engineering – John Hooker at CMU May 2000
    http://web.tepper.cmu.edu/ethics/guide.pdf

    Analysis:
    National Society of Professional Engineers – code of ethics for engineers
    NSPE – Board of Ethical Review Cases – all published online starting from 2000

    Potential Videos:
    “The Truesteel Affair” – 1983
    “Gilbane Gold: A Case Study in Engineering Ethics” – 1989
    “Testing Water…And Ethics” – 1998
    “Incident at Morales” (NIEE) – 2003
    “Ethicana” – 2009

Leave a Reply