Debating E-commerce: Engaging Students in Current Events Amber Settle CTI, DePaul University Joint...

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Debating E-commerce: Engaging Students in Current Events

Amber SettleCTI, DePaul University

Joint work with André Berthiaume

ISECONNovember 2, 2002

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Outline

• Approaches to integrating social, legal,and ethical issues in the curriculum

• The debates Topics Structure Format Grading

• Results– Common outcomes– Undergraduate– Graduate

• Future work

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Social, legal, ethical issues in the curriculum

Separate course:School of CTI, DePaul University:

• Undergraduate– General education– Little technical content

• Graduate (Masters level)– Course for Ph.D. students– Elective only

Within existing courses (Cohen and Cornwall 1989):• Add lectures (passive)• Written assignments (re-enforce students’ bias)• Interactive dialog (difficult in large classes)• Debates (structure + interactive learning)

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The debates

• Purpose– Critical thinking– Controversial, technical topics– Focus on the content, not debate format

• Courses– ECT 250: Survey of e-commerce technology– DS 420: Foundations of distributed systems– Similarities: Survey courses– Differences: Level and maturity of students

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Debate topics

• Offensive Web content: Controlling content viewing• Copyrighting digital media: Napster case and others• The U.S. government vs. the Microsoft Corporation• Legal issues in e-commerce: Digital signatures• Sklyarov case and code breaking in general• U.S. bill draft: Government imposed software security• The French government versus Yahoo!• Virtual child pornography

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Debate structure

• Timing: Introduced after the midterm• Positions: Pro and con

Example: Copyrighting digital mediaPro: Copyrights should be enforced on the Web

Con: Copyrights should not or cannot be enforced

• Preparation: A written research summary– Context for the debate– A summary of the position taken– A list of references with short quotes

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In-class debate• Pro’s opening statement (5 minutes)

Gives context and states position• Con’s cross-examination (3 minutes)

Rebuttal of pro’s position• Con’s position statement (4 minutes)

Statement of position• Pro’s cross-examination (3 minutes)

Response to con’s statements• Audience comments/questions (8 minutes)

Assigned interrogators and others• Closing statements (2 minutes each)

Points of each side are recapped

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Grading

Options for students• Debate• Extra questions about debates on final exam

Undergraduate course• Extra credit to debate• Every student produced a paper• Extra guidance (papers, grading)

Graduate course• Interrogator (questions and expected answers)

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General results

• One to two quarters of data• Enthusiastic response• High quality papers and debates• Good participation from non-native speakers• Variation between graduate and undergraduate

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Undergraduate course

• Spring quarter 2002 only• 14 students in the course (only 5 in CTI)• Traditional age undergraduates• Native speakers only• Four debates

– Copyrighting digital media– Skylarov case– Offensive Web content (2)

• Positives: – Well-prepared– Articulate

• Negatives– Some debates unorganized– Little integration/analysis of material

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Graduate course

• Winter and spring quarters 2002• 36-52 students in the four classes• Mixed ages and nationalities• Debates by quarter

– Winter: All but one topic– Spring: Only three topics– Topics may have seemed stale

• Positives:– Evaluated technical aspects well– Very articulate and objective– High audience participation in spring– Better integration of material in lectures

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Future

Continuing work in the two courses• More explicit guidance for undergraduate debaters• New topics

Conduct debates earlier to allow reflection Investigate using debates in other CTI courses

• CSC 200: Survey of computer technology Conducted in Spring 2002 by another instructor

• Capstone courses– More technical knowledge– Public speaking course

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References• Clark, Martyn, 2000, “Getting Participation Through Discussion.”

SIGCSE Bulletin 32(1): 129-133.• Cohen, Eli, and Larry Cornwell, 1989, “A Question of Ethics:

Developing Information Systems Ethics.” Journal of Business Ethics 8: 431-437.

• Coulouris, George, Jean Dollimore, and Tim Kindberg, 2001, Distributed Systems: Concepts and Design, Third Edition, Addison Wesley.

• Laudon, Kenneth and Carol Traver, 2002, E-commerce: Business,Technology, Society. Addison Wesley.

• Siegfried, Robert, M., 2001, “What’s Wrong with Napster? A Study of Student Attitudes on Downloading Music and Pirating Software.” Proceedings of the 18th Annual Information Systems Education Conference (ISECON).

• Wahl, Nancy, 1999, “YAATCE – Yet Another Approach to Teaching Computer Ethics”, SIGCSE Bulletin 31(1): 22-26.