Every researcher who works with human subjects at UBC is required to complete the online ethics
tutorial called TCPS 2, posted by the Canadian Tri-Councils (i.e., SSHRC -- Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council; NSERC -- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council; and CIHR -- Canadian Institutes of Health Research).
The tutorial takes approximately 3 hours to complete. We will start working on it in class tonight, and complete it over the next week or two. You will need to work on your own personal completion of the tutorial, but I suggest that you will learn more by working collaboratively with one or two partners from your reading circle -- which is how we will begin today in class.
Here is the link to the tutorial. Once you complete the tutorial, you will receive a certificate of successful completion, which you should post to your blog before the end of our course.
FYI, here is a link to a historical timeline of cases related to the development of research ethics. This one is largely US based, but the events listed had reverberations in Canada too.
As you go through the ethics tutorial, keep notes on a blog post about your own impressions, ideas and thoughts about the examples given and the ethical issues raised for researchers. We will discuss these as we go along.
tutorial called TCPS 2, posted by the Canadian Tri-Councils (i.e., SSHRC -- Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council; NSERC -- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council; and CIHR -- Canadian Institutes of Health Research).
The tutorial takes approximately 3 hours to complete. We will start working on it in class tonight, and complete it over the next week or two. You will need to work on your own personal completion of the tutorial, but I suggest that you will learn more by working collaboratively with one or two partners from your reading circle -- which is how we will begin today in class.
Here is the link to the tutorial. Once you complete the tutorial, you will receive a certificate of successful completion, which you should post to your blog before the end of our course.
FYI, here is a link to a historical timeline of cases related to the development of research ethics. This one is largely US based, but the events listed had reverberations in Canada too.
As you go through the ethics tutorial, keep notes on a blog post about your own impressions, ideas and thoughts about the examples given and the ethical issues raised for researchers. We will discuss these as we go along.
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