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Latest revision as of 14:24, 22 October 2021
Research Integrity and Research Ethics Scenarios for Teaching
What is this about?
Members of The Embassy of Good Science have developed a set of eight scenarios for educational purposes and to stimulate strategic thinking about issues in research ethics and research integrity.
Each scenario is targeted at three broad groups:
- Researchers;
- Research ethics committees ('RECs') and research integrity offices ('RIOs');
- Research administrators.
Each scenario takes the form of a hypothetical narrative interspersed with questions and resource suggestions that help guide deliberations concerning the issues raised by the narrative.
The scenarios are designed to help researchers, research ethics committees ('RECs'), research integrity offices ('RIOs') and research administrators to become better acquainted with The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity ('ECCRI') as a regulatory document that articulates the standards of good research practice. They also allow users to reflect on and apply their own national and institutional research ethics and research integrity codes as well as other key regulatory documents and guidelines.
According to the ECCRI, there are eight categories of research ‘contexts’ that are covered by the standards of good research practice. In order to ensure that the set is comprehensive, members of The Embassy of Good Science have developed one scenario for each of the ECCRI's research contexts:
2) Training, Supervision and Mentoring
4) Safeguards
5) Data Practices and Management
7) Publication and Dissemination
8) Reviewing, Evaluating and EditingWhy is this important?
The scenarios are educational in three ways:
- In terms of their content, the scenarios develop upon and extend educational resources in research ethics and research integrity in order to allow users to gain knowledge of, and reflectively apply, The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity ('ECCRI') as a regulatory document that articulates the standards of good research practice;
- In terms of their structure, they take the form of a hypothetical narrative interspersed with questions and resource suggestions that help guide user deliberations concerning the issues raised by the narrative;
- Users have the opportunity to employ the scenarios as learning instruments in a classroom setting.
For whom is this important?
What are the best practices?
The Embassy editorial team, Iris Lechner, Natalie Evans, Jonathan Lewis, Andrijana Perković Paloš contributed to this theme. Latest contribution was Oct 22, 2021
Other information
Virtues & Values
Good Practices & Misconduct
- Allegation of Misconduct
- Anonymization
- Authorship
- Bias
- Beneficence
- Citing
- Collaborative research
- Communication
- Complaints procedure
- Confidentiality
- Conflict of Interest
- Consent
- Copyright
- Data Management
- Data Protection
- Data sharing
- Experimental design
- Fabrication
- Falsification
- Good Practice
- HARKing
- Harm
- Institutional Responsibilities
- International collaboration
- Journal Retractions
- Mentoring
- Methodology
- Misconduct Investigations
- Monitoring research
- P-Hacking
- P-value Hacking
- Peer Review
- Plagiarism
- Pre-registrations
- Privacy
- Publication Ethics
- Questionable research practice
- REC approval
- Research Environments
- Research Integrity
- Research Misconduct
- Research culture
- Research ethics
- Respect
- Responsibility
- Retraction
- Responsible research
- Reusing Published Data
- Reusing Published Material
- Safeguards
- Safety
- Scientific Misdonduct
- Scope of University's Complaints Procedure
- Selection bias
- Supervision
- Training
- Vulnerable and non-competent subjects
- Vulnerable population
- Whistleblowers
- Whistleblowing