Ethics in Science

Welcome!

Greetings! My name is Gracie Bellnap and I'm your Ethics in Science teacher for the 2024 Fall Semester. During our time together, I hope to drive curious discussions, enable you to make discoveries, connect your current knowledge with new information, and grow a greater appreciation and understanding of ethics within the scientific field.

We will still use MySA for grading, but communication about due dates, assignment details, the syllabus, and other course information can be found here.

Some Things That Changed My Life:

1. We don’t know everything! It took me way too long to realize that scientists, and textbook writers, do not have all the information! Scientific “research” didn’t make very much sense to me because I wasn’t sure what else there was even left to know! THERE’S A LOT LEFT TO KNOW. (Do turtles have best friends? Maybe.) There are people asking questions and pursuing ways to answer them in every subject out there. This is freeing, whimsical, and even daunting that there is SO much waiting to be cracked! Including plenty of mysteries lying inside your own body! I hope this serves as some motivation to wrap your tendrils around whenever you are chugging through the “nuts and bolts” of our class content. 

2. Science is a *way of knowing things,* and not a strict set of facts, figures, and rules. There are lots of different ways to say this, but what I mean is science is a really great tool for figuring stuff out. There’s other tools to figure the same stuff out, it’ll just look a little different--science bases itself in logic, evidence, and reasoning. I consider myself a scientist because I think it’s the best way to understand our world, but this isn’t to say I don’t seek out other ways. Whether it’s a botanist learning from a microbiologist, a medical doctor learning from a naturalist, or an astronomer learning from an artist, there is immense value in interdisciplinary efforts. Find it when you can! I also want to note here that science has, can, and will continue to be flawed. Our standards for “good science” have come a long way, which is why we have been able to “debunk” long-believed myths (Learn about the infamous taste bud diagram here. The zones of our tongue is a century old lie we believed!), but this isn’t to say they won’t continue to change!


3. Small Things Considered/The Little Things Are The Big Things! Lynn Margulis, a researcher specializing in cells and microorganisms, one of the most prominent biologists in the last century, and a personal idol of mine, really brought this into focus (HA!) for me. I am typically a big picture kind of gal, so I would get skim over some of the “small” stuff. I realize now I will never see the big picture without first really, truly understanding the seemingly insignificant things. (They are the *most* significant!) There’s some cheesy quote that says something like “One day you’ll realize the small things were actually the big things all along.” This!!! This is how I feel about learning about biology. Whenever you think at some point this semester “this is all memorizing,” or “this stuff can’t matter” just remind yourself that whatever you learn now will help you understand the world a little better later on. Keep grinding! A ‘light bulb moment’ will come eventually for you, and it will be SO cool. 


4.THISTED TALK!!!Once you learn that trees talk to each other using the mushroom internet, your life will never be the same.I know it’s 18 minutes, but I am telling you this is one of the craziest things I’ve ever learned. I will never think about the world the same. Please watch and tell me what you think!

Remember that all of your grades can be found in MySA. This website is just for you to access content for the course.

Week 1

August 14 - 16

Context!

Week 2

August 19 - 23

Sci-Fi, Science, and the Public

Week 3

August 26 - 30

Writing and Watching Good Science Fiction




Week 4

September 3 - 6

Defining Science: Knowing? Truth?


Week 5

September 9 - 13

Defining Science: The Scientific Revolution


Week 6

September 16 - 20

Defining Ethics


Week 7

September 23 - 27

Moral Theories and Development


Week 8

September 30 - October 4

Science as a Profession


Week 9

October 7-11

Pillars of Scientific Ethics


Week 10

October 14 - 18

Ethical Research


Week 11

October 21 - 25

Research & Publication


Week 12

October 28 - November 1

Scientific Hoaxes and Ethical Laboratories


Week 13

November 4 - 8

Intro to Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks


Week 14

November 11 - 15

Henrietta Lacks cont.


Week 15

November 18 - 22

HeLa!


Week 16

December 2 - 6


Week 17

December 9 - 13


Week 18

December 16 - 20