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Contact:
Dr. Gary Comstock 919/513-5131
Keith Nichols,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Sept.
1, 2005
NC
State Gets $250,000 NSF Award to Lead National
Ethics Effort
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The
Research and Professional Ethics Program at North
Carolina State University has been awarded $250,000
over three years from the National Science Foundation
(NSF) to develop a model curriculum in research ethics.
Research ethics is an academic discipline that studies
arguments about which actions are morally right or
wrong in conducting scientific research. Many of these
issues are regularly debated on the evening news, including
the ethics of producing human embryonic stem cells
for research, or genetically modifying organisms for
food.
NC State
is the lead institution for this national effort.
The other schools are N.C. A&T State University,
N.C. Central University, Fayetteville State University,
Purdue University, Iowa State University, the University
of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Hawaii.
More than 100 faculty members at these universities
are involved in the project known as “LANGURE” (Land
Grant University Research Ethics). They will work together
to develop a new course in responsible conduct of research.
“This award reaffirms NC State’s place
as a national leader in research ethics and underscores
our commitment to high ethical standards,” said
NC State Chancellor James L. Oblinger. “As a
research-extensive, land-grant university, NC State
leads the way in this endeavor. Land-grant universities
across the country are looking to us for innovative
thinking in graduate ethics education.”
Rachelle
Hollander, NSF program director for Ethics Education
in Science and Engineering, said, “LANGURE
is one of 11 projects that NSF is funding this year
to improve ethics education for graduate students in
the fields of science and engineering that NSF supports.
While many universities with medical schools have instructional
materials in responsible conduct of research, most
land-grant universities – which typically do
not have medical schools – have not created a
similar set of instructional materials. LANGURE is
an ambitious and well-planned initiative to address
that need.”
The
principal investigator for the project is Dr. Gary
Comstock, director of NC State’s
Research Ethics Program and professor of philosophy.
Dr. Brenda Alston-Mills,
assistant dean of diversity in NC State’s College
of Agriculture and Life Sciences and professor of animal
science, and Dr. Christine Grant, professor of chemical
engineering, join Comstock as co-principal investigators. “This grant is unique and groundbreaking, a
milestone in NC State’s continuing efforts to
provide state-of-the-art ethics education for graduate
students,” Comstock said. “Last spring
the (NC State) University Graduate Students’ Association
passed a resolution recommending that all doctoral
students be required to take a research ethics course.
The NSF grant helps us respond to their request.”
“We are excited about this extraordinary opportunity,” said
Alston-Mills. “The grant provides us with the
funds to create a universitywide program involving
graduate faculty and their students. Our ultimate aim
is to institutionalize the teaching of research ethics
at land-grant universities across the country.”
The LANGURE
course will include examples of ethical behavior
from business and industry. Toward this end,
the private software firm SAS, located in Cary, will
collaborate with LANGURE’s teams.
“SAS is enthusiastic about LANGURE because of
its unusual potential,” said Kathy Council, SAS’s
vice president for publications. “SAS, the market
leader for a new generation of business intelligence
software, has recently developed a code of ethics we
require all employees to study and sign. LANGURE will
produce additional materials that will be used widely
by professionals around the world studying business
ethics and appropriate ways to interpret statistics.
We look forward to collaborating with NC State on this
valuable initiative in the teaching of values.”
Other SAS executives involved are: John Boswell (legal),
Andreas Diggelmann (international strategy), Jeff Chambers
(human resources), and Alan Eaton (research).
Robert Sowell,
dean of the Graduate School at NC State, said, “The Graduate School is proud to be associated
with LANGURE. In cooperation with faculty teams from
LANGURE’s seven partner schools, NC State graduate
faculty will develop materials in several fields, including:
nanotechnology, physics, computer science and engineering,
chemical engineering, microbiology, nuclear engineering,
plant biology, sustainable agriculture, business, public
administration, agricultural extension, intellectual
property, and use of animals. Faculty will also update
modules previously developed at NC State to include:
statistics, mentoring, authorship and peer review,
and intellectual property. These are areas critical
to the education of our graduate students."
More information on LANGURE is available on the Web.
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