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RE: ERIC search on Values and Technology, Science and

teaching


TITLE

New Ways of Knowledge:

The Sciences, Society, and

: / by Raskin, Marcus G.; And Others Pages; Fiche:

Document no.: [H

ABSTRACT

: In this volume, physicists and social scientists

challenge the bedrock of scientific thinking whose

applications can prove destructive to existing social

systems, and shift the debate to the need for a radical

change of direction that would replace traditional

"value-free" inquiry and research with a knowledge model

that incorporates social responsibility, democratic

principles, and comprehensive ethical standards. Presented in

this book is a form of inquiry -reconstructive knowledge

-concerned with the assumptions and practices of modern

science and the politics of scientific discipline. Essays

included are: (1) "Reconstruction and Its Knowledge Method"

(Marcus Raskin); (2) "Idols of Modern Science and the

Reconstruction of Knowledge" (Herbert Bernstein); (3)"Toward a

Reconstructive Political Science" (Raskin, Bernstein); (4)

"Exchanges on Reconstructive Knowledge"(Noam Chomsky,

Raskin); (5) "Ending the Faustian Bargain (Raskin); (6) "

The

Human Meaning the Information Revolution" (Michael

Goldhaber); (7) "

The Selling of Market Economics" (Edward

Herman); (8) "Semiotic Boundaries and the Politics of

Meaning: Modernity on Tour--A Village in Transition" (Susan

Buck-Morss); (9) "Seizing Power/Grasping Truth" (Joseph

Turner); and (10) "Conclusion: A Manifesto of Reconstructive

Knowledge" (Raskin).

The themes of the social construction of

reality, the social sciences' ability to determine fates and

fortunes, the linkage between the realms of knowledge

generation and of political direction, and that economics as a

discipline is a rule of human organization (not nature), are

included.


:Concern about Ethics and Ethical Issues among Professors of

Instructional Systems Design and Technology. / by

Nichols, Randall; And Others

Pub.Date: 1987Pages; Fiche: 11; Document no.:

ED304099FOUND IN ERIC microfiche unless noted otherwise:

EDRS Price - MF01/PC01 Plus Postage.[


ABSTRACT

: With a growing awareness of the importance of

ethical issues in the profession of educational

communications and technology, he Professional Ethics

Committee of the Association for Educational Communications and

Technology:(AECT) decided to assess the current thinking of

association members toward ethics in the field.

The

committee wished to conduct research in which a broad base of

data might be collected that could reflect membership

positions in at least three areas: (1) the degree to which

members feel ethics to be important and address them; (2)

specific issues deemed to be important; and (3) ways in

which an ethical code might be applied. Using a

nine-question open-ended questionnaire, a preliminary survey was

conducted at a May 1987 meeting of 80 professors of

instructional systems design and technology, many of whom

were members of AECT. Answers to the responses from the 43

professors who participated in the survey were tallied and

analyzed. It was found that, as a group, the respondents

perceive that they address ethical issues in a variety of

ways, but that more needs to be done; the range of issues

identified was quite broad, ranging from the effects of

technology on learners in general to the effects on whole

cultures; and, although they are concerned about ethical

issues, as a group they do not feel that monitoring of

practicing professionals is necessary. This paper includes a copy

of the questionnaire, an analysis of the responses to each

question, and a summary of the results.


McCaleb, Joseph L. Dean, Kevin W.[HRt] TITLE


: Ethics and Communication Education: Empowering

Teachers. / byMcCaleb, Joseph L.; Dean, Kevin W.Pub.Date:

Document no.:J364700FOUND INCommnication Education; v n4 p410-16

Oct 1987

ABSTRACT

: Argues that communication education must cultivate in

teachers the capacity to respond sensitively to teaching values.

Defines the responsible teacher as one who: (1)

understands structure of the discipline including the

relationships among communication, ethics, and morality; (2)

understands students' cognitive, social, and moral

development; and (3) can model selection, analysis,

integration, and applications of ethical issues (NKA)Notes:

Special Issue: Censorship in Education.