Teaching Ethics in Computing: A Systematic Literature Review of ACM Computer Science Education Publications

Author:

Brown Noelle1ORCID,Xie Benjamin2ORCID,Sarder Ella3ORCID,Fiesler Casey3ORCID,Wiese Eliane S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Utah, USA

2. Stanford University, USA

3. University of Colorado Boulder, USA

Abstract

The computing education research community now has at least 40 years of published research on teaching ethics in higher education. To examine the state of our field, we present a systematic literature review of papers in the Association for Computing Machinery computing education venues that describe teaching ethics in higher-education computing courses. Our review spans all papers published to SIGCSE, ICER, ITiCSE, CompEd, Koli Calling, and TOCE venues through 2022, with 100 papers fulfilling our inclusion criteria. Overall, we found a wide variety in content, teaching strategies, challenges, and recommendations. The majority of the papers did not articulate a conception of “ethics,” and those that did used many different conceptions, from broadly applicable ethical theories to social impact to specific computing application areas (e.g., data privacy and hacking). Instructors used many different pedagogical strategies (e.g., discussions, lectures, assignments) and formats (e.g., stand-alone courses, incorporated within a technical course). Many papers identified measuring student knowledge as a particular challenge, and 59% of papers included mention of assessments or grading. Of the 69% of papers that evaluated their ethics instruction, most used student self-report surveys, course evaluations, and instructor reflections. While many papers included calls for more ethics content in computing, specific recommendations were rarely broadly applicable, preventing a synthesis of guidelines. To continue building on the last 40 years of research and move toward a set of best practices for teaching ethics in computing, our community should delineate our varied conceptions of ethics, examine which teaching strategies are best suited for each, and explore how to measure student learning.

Funder

National Science Foundation

McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society, Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI), Stanford Accelerator for Learning, Woods Institute for the Environment

Mozilla Foundation through a Responsible Computing Challenge award

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Education,General Computer Science

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