The Ethics of Digital Scholarship
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Transcript of The Ethics of Digital Scholarship
Teaching Ethics: A digital scholarship perspective
Martin Weller
Overview
• Open scholarship• Ethical perspective• Ethics of obligation vs risks• How open for students• Open Access/Open data• OERs • New skills• Learning analytics• Conclusions
The Digital Scholar book
Bloomsburyacademic.com
Open scholarship
Weller (2011) open scholars are likely to:• Have a distributed online identity • Have a central place for their identity• Have cultivated an online network of peers • Have developed a personal learning environment from a range of tools• Engage with open publishing • Create a range of informal outputs • Try new technologies • Mix personal and professional outputs • Use new technologies to support teaching and research• Automatically create and share outputs
By psd http://www.flickr.com/photos/psd/3717444865/
Openness is an efficient approachBenefits in terms of:
ReuseCost savingMarketingRecruitmentPublic engagement
Focus on ethical side
What is teaching?
• Partly enculturation• What if that culture has changed or is less
valid?
Competing set of ethical considerations
• We should be equipping students with skills and approaches that will be relevant
Learning is a vulnerable process & risks associated
• Phonar• DS106• Rhizo14• Good community• Open approach is at heart
H817Open
• Create own blog• Aggregate together• Some did behind password• Others felt excluded• Forcing people into open
Open Access
• Anything paid for by Govt funding should be freely available
• But what about things paid for by student fees?
• “Publishing science behind paywalls is immoral” (Mike Taylor)
Open data
• G8 treaty on open data - all government data will be released openly by default
• Mandates that put data with publications
• But what about ‘human’ data?• Deanonymising data is not
difficult • Date of birth, gender & zip code is
unique for 87% of the population • Ohm: ‘Data can be either useful or
perfectly anonymous but never both.’
OERs
• Is there an ethical compulsion to release teaching content?
• Is it unethical not to expose your students to the best content?
Developing appropriate skills
• Networker• Digital identity• Engaging with the open net
• Are the academic skills we teach still relevant?
Should we be teaching our students the art of guerrilla research?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/idfonline/5981013497/
“what’s important here is that Zuckerberg’s genius could be embraced by half-a-billion people within six years of its first being launched, without (and here is the critical bit) asking permission of anyone. The real story is not the invention. It is the platform that makes the invention sing.”(Larry Lessig)
The manifesto
1. It can be done by one or two researchers and does not require a team
2. It relies on existing open data, information and tools
3. It is fairly quick to realise4. It is disseminated via blogs and social media5. It doesn’t require permission
More ethical?
12 days for a conventional
proposal was the average (RCUK 2006)
ESRC - only 17% of bids were successful in
2009-10
RCUK = 2006 £196 million on
applications to the 8 UK research
councils
2800 bids submitted to ESRC in 2009-10, an
increase in 33% from 2005-6
ESRC - 2000 failed bids x 12 days per bid = 65 years of
effort
Learning analytics
• Can be powerful tool to support students• Ethical element of gathering data• Predictive analytics – should we
encourage/discourage people who have little chance of success?
James Boyle:
“We are very good at seeing the downsides and the dangers of open systems, open production systems, networks of openness. .. Those dangers are real… we are not so good at seeing the benefits and the converse holds true for the closed system.”
Conclusions
• New tools & approaches offer new possibilities
• Openness is key to many of these• But bring new ethical considerations• Ethics in NOT adopting as well as adopting