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On the Need for Ethical Buying and Selling
In 1978 the Center for the Study of the Professions at IIT conducted a survey for the National Association of Purchasing Management to determine the real ethical practices of industrial buyers in the United States. This survey started the Ethical Standards Committee thinking about the current ethical practices in the field, and this paper seeks to discuss the roots of some of these practices questions that arose after reviewing the results of this survey., CSEP Occasional Papers No. 6, May 1982. Remarks Delivered at the Professional Ethics Luncheon Seminar, Americana Congress Hotel, Chicago, March 23, 1982
Ownership of Computer Programs
Discusses reasons for against copyrighting computer software programs. Reasons against include the potential for holding back scientific discoveries. Though the labor that goes into creating computer programs does seem to create property rights, the principle of free thought seems to override this right. The author discusses some of the problems that exist in copyright, trade secret, and patent law and discusses why these laws should be changed to discourage secrecy so they do not interfere with free thought., Presented at a meeting of the Collegiate Institute for Values and Science, University of Michigan, December 9, 1981
Engineering Codes of Ethics : Analysis and Applications
This paper uses the events leading up to the explosion of the Challenger to begin a discussion about the important role professional codes of ethics play in shaping how professionals should respond to ethical questions and issues that come up in daily practice. The paper explores the history of codes of ethics, why different engineering professions, such as computer engineering, and mechanical engineering, have developed their own codes of ethics, and tries to answer the question, why obey your profession's code? The paper also analyzes a case study using the codes of ethics and offers a series of case studies for further discussion., Manuscript of an unpublished paper originally written to be part of the Exxon Modules for Applied Ethics Series. http://ethics.iit.edu/index1.php/Publications/Modules%20in%20Applied%20Ethics
Critical Attributes of Good Process Decisions: a Guide for Reflective Special Education Hearing Officers
This monograph offers guidance for special education due process hearing officers in their efforts to write good due process decisions. It has four sections dealing respectively with: - Summary and explanation of factual findings; - Justification of legal conclusions; - Framing and determination of rulings and orders; - Writing choices in a special education due process opinion as to word selection, organizational structure, style, rhetoric, and tone. The monograph is not intended to replace, but instead to supplement, the use of comprehensive summaries of substantive and procedural special education law. It aims to address an essential, yet presently unmet need – for an educational approach that helps special education due process hearing officers to focus critical reflection upon processes involved both in thinking through issues in a case and finding words to express the conclusions arrived at in writing a decision.
Limitations Upon Legitimate Authority to Suspend and Expel K-12 Public School Students: A Moral Analysis
This paper presents a moral analysis of the limitations upon legitimate authority to suspend and expel students in K-12 public schools. The paper has four sections. The first presents two case vignettes that pose difficult moral issues concerning suspensions and expulsions in K-12 public schools. The second section develops an analysis of the moral bases of a child’s right to receive a K-12 public education. Section three extends the analysis in section two, relating it specifically to limitations upon morally legitimate authority to suspend and expel students in K-12 public schools. The fourth section returns to the two case vignettes and discusses the moral issues they pose from the standpoint of the analysis developed in sections two and three. . The analysis, I hope, will benefit educators, parents, and the general public in helping to identify, clarify their understanding of, and gain insight into principles, which, I believe underlie any morally justifiable policy concerning K-12 public school suspensions and expulsions.
Moral Responsibility and Whistleblowing in the Nuclear Industry : Browns Ferry and Three Mile Island
This paper analyzes the actions of a number of Nuclear Engineers at Browns Ferry and Three Mile Island who resigned from their positions in order to highlight the safety concerns they saw in the U.S. nuclear power program and nuclear power plant safety. The paper includes a description and chronology of events, and an in-depth case study analysis of the moral responsibility of engineers and whistleblowing.
Paul V. Galvin Library, Illinois Institute of Technology
35 West 33rd Street , Chicago, Illinois
Machinery Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
100 West 33rd Street, Chicago, Illinois
Farr Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
3300 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois
Lewis Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
70 East 33rd Street, Chicago, Illinois
Professionalism Among Chinese Engineers: An Empirical Study
Professionalism Among Chinese Engineers: An Empirical Study
This is a copy of a dataset - in English and Chinese - completed in 2018 looking at concepts of professionalism. Following on the Davis, Zhang survey of 2016, this study continues to evaluate the claim that China has a profession of engineering (as defined by Davis) with a larger, better educated, demographically different pool of two hundred and twenty-nine Chinese engineers, using more specific and deeper questions about “profession”, for example, by adding the investigation of competence (the discipline of engineering)—the perceived knowledge, skill, and judgment of the interviewees as evidence of one aspect of profession. The dataset includes a copy of the questionnaire in Chinese and English, as well as both the entire dataset of surveyed individuals as well as the data from individuals who were deemed to have enough experience in engineering to be included in the final data set analyzed.
Siegel Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
3301 South Dearborn Street , Chicago, Illinois
Fowler Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
3241 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Illinois
Main Building, Illinois Institute of Technology
3300 South Federal Street, Chicago, Illinois
Main Building, Illinois Institute of Technology
3300 South Federal Street, Chicago, Illinois
Gunsaulus Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
3140 South Michigan Avenue , Chicago, Illinois
Carman Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
60 East 32nd Street, Chicago, Illinois
Alumni Memorial Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
3201 South Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois
The Commons, Illinois Institute of Technology
3200 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Illinois
East Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology
71 East 32nd Street, Chicago, Illinois

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