Guidelines for Student Research
Writing Program
University of California, Santa Barbara

April 24, 1998

Addendum, December 11, 2000
NOTICE


Beginning January 1, 2001, all faculty who are assigning field research as a part of their courses (including interviews) and all students who are conducting field research, must complete the HS Training Module located at: http://hstraining.orda.ucsb.edu before conducting the research. The login ID for all Writing Program lecturers and students is OTHR-WR-PR-041; the ID "owner" is the Writing Program Director's last name. See sample page.


Background

     A primary curricular goal of most of our classes is to familiarize students with ways in which scholars in various disciplines produce knowledge through primary research. To facilitate this goal, Writing Program instructors often ask students to perform primary research; in some models of Writing 2, for example, student work in the science and social science units typically involves some sort of manipulation of or interaction with the natural or social world. Because this kind of research has the potential to harm the subject being studied (whether object, animal, or human), professional researchers are responsible for assessing and justifying the ethicality of their research before undertaking it. At UCSB, this means more specifically that



     To fulfill these obligations, the basic ethical principles and safeguards that guide scientific and social scientific research are outlined here so that you can pass these on to your students. Also discussed are the conditions that must be maintained for the Writing Program to continue to receive program-wide (rather than project-by-project) clearance from the Human Subjects Committee, and additional Writing Program policies designed to prevent inadvertent violations of these conditions.


Ethical Principles: Avoiding Harm to Research Subjects

     In general, assessing the ethicality of research involves balancing the potential benefits of a particular research project against the potential harm it might cause. Harm is defined by scientists and social scientists not only as physical damage or pain, but also as harm to one's reputation or emotional state (causing someone distress, embarrassment, etc.). Although professional researchers may be able to justify some risk of harm due to the potential benefits of their research, such projects are always subject to individual review by the Human Subjects Committee of the Office of Research; in no case would program-wide exemptions apply to such projects. Because student research is unlikely to produce great benefits to anyone other than the students, and because we need student research to fall within the guidelines of the program-wide exemption, efforts must be made to insure that the risk of potential harm in student research is minimal.

     In the Science unit of Writing 2 (for those models using experiments or field observation), for example, there is the potential for students to inadvertently cause harm in several ways, all of which can be avoided by setting limits on the kinds of research students perform and the ways in which they perform it. For example, while observing animal behavior is certainly acceptable, interfering with or manipulating this behavior runs a risk of harm to the animal that is likely not justified by the purpose of the research. Similarly, while it is acceptable for a student to use a friend as a subject in a consumer product testing experiment, the student must insure that the friend is not likely to experience an allergic reaction to the product being tested.

     Identifying potential harm in social science research is somewhat more difficult than in scientific research, as the determination of what might cause reputational or emotional harm requires both familiarity and empathy with the population being studied. Risk of harm can be avoided, for the most part, if students understand the importance of the following basic social science procedures which safeguard research subjects:

Insuring Anonymity

     Data should be collected in such a way that the identity of the subject is protected. This means that no names, telephone numbers, social security or perm numbers, or addresses should appear on survey sheets or in the research report. Interview subjects (excluding interviews with experts, which are covered in the Programmatic Clearance section below) should be given fictitious names.


Obtaining Informed Consent

     Social scientists believe that a great deal of potential harm can be avoided by obtaining informed consent of research subjects prior to the research. In essence, informed consent means that subjects

     Research practices that violate the principle of informed consent include those that involve deception and/or coercion. The two are related in the sense that if a researcher does not tell people that they are being studied (deception), the researcher is therefore forcing the people to participate (coercion). Coercion can occur by itself when people are made aware that they are the subjects of research but not given the option of non-participation. While some professional researchers do use deceptive and coercive research practices, these are currently very controversial in the social science community and researchers who engage in such practices are expected to justify them by demonstrating that their research has great social benefits. Additionally, these kinds of proposed research projects often face opposition when presented to institutional committees that approve and/or sponsor research.


Programmatic Clearance

     The Writing Program has obtained a program-wide exemption from the University’s Human Subjects Committee which allows our students to pursue research without obtaining the Committee’s consent beforehand. This exemption binds us to the following guidelines regarding student research projects and informed consent:


If an instructor feels a proposed student research project may not fall within these guidelines, he/she should discuss it with his/her TA supervisor, if a TA, or with the Program Director, if a lecturer.


Additional Writing Program Policies

     In addition to the above, the Writing Program is putting the following additional policies in place to prevent inadvertent violation of the guidelines.
All courses:
Writing 2:
Science Unit:

Social Science Unit:

Writing 1, 50, 109 series



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updated: 06 April 2005
created: 13 December 2000

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