School of Engineering and
Applied
Science Department of Computer Science CSci 110 -- Technology and Society http://www.seas.gwu.edu/~mfeldman/csci110/summer06 Prof. Michael B. Feldman, course instructor mfeldman@gwu.edu |
WEEK (click for details) |
TOPIC |
INDIVIDUAL PRODUCT (due in Digital Drop Box by 11:59 PM EDT) |
GROUP PRODUCT (due in Digital Drop Box by 11:59 PM EDT) |
---|---|---|---|
7/5-7/11 |
Introduction, History, Ethics |
(due by Friday 7/7) Digital photo (JPEG or GIF) of yourself; introduce yourself to group members; personal ethical evaluation (5%) (due by Tuesday 7/11) Group discussion of ethics scenario |
|
7/12-7/18 |
Privacy |
(due by Friday 7/14) Ethics Scenario Analysis (15%) |
(due by Tuesday 7/18) Group Mini-Report on ID Theft (5%) |
7/19-7/25 |
Free Speech and the Internet |
(due by Friday 7/21) Current Issue Paper #1 (10%) |
(due by Tuesday 7/25) Draft of Zoomerang Survey (5%) |
Week 4 7/26-8/1 |
Reliability of Critical Software
Systems |
(due by Friday 7/28) Sci-Fi Paper (10%) |
(due by Tuesday 8/1) Survey Deployed on Zoomerang |
Week 5 8/2-8/8 |
Can We Trust the Computer? |
(due by Friday 8/4) Current Issue Paper #2 (10%) |
(due by Tuesday 8/8) Preliminary Report on Survey Results (5%) |
8/9-8/14 |
Software as Intellectual Property |
(due by Tuesday 8/15) Final Group Report on ID Theft: Social Impact Analysis (15%) |
Objectives for students: Read! Think!
Write!
Required Textbooks
Baase, Sara.
A Gift of Fire: Social, Legal and Ethical Issues of Computing (2nd
Edition).
Prentice Hall, 2003.
ISBN 0-13-008215-5
Spinello,
R. A.
and Tavani, H. T.
Readings in CyberEthics (2nd Edition).
Jones & Bartlett Publishers, 2004.
ISBN 0-76-372410-6
US Postal Inspectors
Identity Crisis (DVD)
Available direct from USPS, or from GW Bookstore for $1.00.
Time commitment for
this course: 20 hours per week, for 6 weeks.
BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS OF ASSIGNMENTS:
All reports must be typed, 12-point font, double-spaced.
Ethics Scenario Evaluation (15% of your grade): Evaluate an ethical scenario twice - once from the viewpoint of your personal ethical framework and once using the Code of Ethics of a professional society; then compare and contrast the two evaluations (total of 4-5 pages).
Science Fiction Report (10%): Read one science fiction short story or book or watch one science fiction film that presents a point of view about the relationship between technology and humans. Prepare a 3-4 page written report describing the point of view and your reaction to that point of view.
Current Issue Short Papers (10% each, 2 required): You will be provided with a list of possible current issues activities. You may also find them on your own based upon newspaper articles or TV news items.
Social Impact Analysis (30%): This is a class research project on which you will work together in groups to gather data from online computer users to determine public attitudes about the problem of identity theft. There are many serious societal concerns about identity theft and protection of personal data. It affects all of us. Your challenge is to research the topic as a class and design a survey to examine public attitudes about Identity Theft issues and challenges. Each team will write and submit ONE final report of its findings with conclusions and recommendations.
IMPORTANT NOTE: