1) The experiment does not produce evidence that will improve society. It also violate's the "subject's" privacy and doesn't protect their information especially since they do not know they are a part of an experiment and their information is presented to another. Also since these subjects are minors, they need permission from their parents.
2) Nuremburg Code: Doesn't have informed consent Declaration of Helsinki: doesn't protect basic identity and social information Belmont: participants most like are not equally, and fairly compensated 3) The problem with data collection is that the experiment is in a public setting typically used for education. This probably will cause each subject to mostly focus on school work and not for their leisure or entertainment as they might at home or other personal areas. Another problem is that the subjects may not typically use the web. The collection of data also doesn't provide any useful data that will benefit society at any level. 4) Pose a relevant research question: how does the gender of a person affect the type of website they browse and the length of time they are on? Then, select a random subject pool. Send out consent forms to each subject. After gaining permission from each subject, create a survey that collects anonymous information from the subject asking about their gender, the types of website they visit, and how long they visit for a day or a week. Make sure all subjects take the subject in the same environment i.e. the school library. 5) Checklist for Adult Sponsor Student Checklist and Research Plan Approval Form Official Abstract Form Human Participants Form Qualified Scientist Form
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorClass of 2018 Categories
All
Archives
June 2016
|