Computing, Ethics, & Society

Assignments > Midterm

Due on Fri, 02/02 @ 11:59PM.

Instructions

Develop a conceptual framework that draws on the readings as well as your identity to articulate your unique perspective on a specific technology. That is,

  1. you will choose a technology that you would like to analyze,
  2. you will develop a framework based on theoretical arguments from at least 3 (graduate credit: 5) of the readings covered thus far and your own personal identity and experience in the world,
  3. you will apply your framework to analyze that technology.

Format

Your analysis can take the format of:

  • A paper: 5-6 page (graduate credit: 7-8 page) double spaced, 12-point font, Times New Roman. Must include citations of any quotes/ideas used and bibliography (in addition to page count).
  • OR a presentation: 12-15 minute (graduate credit: 20-22 minute) presentation recording. Must include citations of any quotes/ideas used from readings and bibliography (can be a slide or separate attachment).

Citations

Follow APA guidelines for formatting and references:

Tips and Examples

Ultimately, your conceptual framework should be useful, and productive. You will draw upon it to conduct a sociopolitical analysis of your chosen technology. Your analysis will be designed to shed light on questions such as:

  • What values do this technology reflect, embrace, reject, or encourage?
  • Who is affected by its design? How was its design affected by society?
  • Who reaps the benefits, and who suffers the costs of its creation and use?

Examples (published in BreakPoint Journal!):

  • E-Scooters in Chicago: A Cautionary Tale e-scooters
    • “This paper seeks to understand the values and attitudes that have shaped the implementation of e-scooter technology in Chicago, and their subsequent impact on society. In the process, we will also examine the interplay of public policy and technological advancement, and the politics embedded in society’s interaction with technology.”
  • Blue Emergency Lights: An Investment in White Supremacist Surveillance on College Campuses
    • “I maintain there is an alternative intention; blue emergency lights are a measure of surveillance to increase the perceived safety of students through the exile, policing, and surveillance of Black and brown people.”

Rubric

  Full
(Grade: A-B)
Partial
(Grade: B-C)
Needs work
(Grade: C or lower)
 
Structure, clarity, citations Easy to follow line of analysis through the paper. Well Organized. APA Formatting. Citations. Needs additional clarity on line of analysis through the paper. Semi Organized. APA Formatting. Citations. Minimal to no line of analysis through the paper. Not Organized. Lacks APA Formatting. Lacks citations.  
Conceptual Framework Thoughtful integration of multiple theoretical perspectives drawing on at least 3 (or, for graduate credit, 5) constructs from readings covered so far; clear articulation of how personal experience/identity informs conceptual framework; makes visible how conceptual framework will be useful for the specific purposes of the ethical analysis centered in paper. Includes references to theoretical constructs and/or personal experience/identity, but integration is unclear or incoherent; link to analysis is partial or incomplete. Does not integrate multiple theoretical perspectives using readings; fails to incorporate personal experience/identity in framework; unclear how framework is linked to analysis.  
Analysis Draws clear connections to conceptual framework with references to readings as appropriate. Considers multiple perspectives and includes analysis which addresses implications of technology and how societal conditions shaped design and intent of technology. Makes undertheorized connections to conceptual framework with references to readings as appropriate. Considers one perspective and lacks analysis that addresses both implications of technology and how societal conditions shaped design and intent of technology. No clear connections to conceptual framework. Does not consider perspectives or include analysis that addresses implications of technology and how societal conditions shaped design and intent of technology.