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The Framework

Think about your pedagogy in context

Reflect on your module’s audience

  • Who is involved in your group, and what are their priorities?
  • Is your group predominantly marginalized or non marginalized? 
  • What is your group’s familiarity with tech ethics? With ethics in general?
  • Who in your group might be most interested versus least interested in tech ethics? How might you cater your ethical artifacts to both ends of the spectrum?

Reflect on your own position in the learning process of tech ethics

  • What position do you occupy in the classroom? In society? Related to technology?
  • What do you know about ethics? What do you know about the ethics of technology? Most importantly, what do you not know?
  • How might you acknowledge your areas of ignorance about ethical tech (which is to be expected) in the classroom?
  • In what ways might you share your experiences and values with the class to open up space for students to share their perspectives?

Explore Resources

Ground your technology in ethical critical thinking

Narrow in on a relevant technology for your lesson

Explore the technology's history and context

  • What are the historical and cultural circumstances in which the technology emerged?
  • When was it developed? For what purpose? Who funded it?
  • Who interacts with the algorithm? What do they do with it?
  • How has its usage and function changed from then to today (Lin, 2021)?

Explore ethical values, interests, hazards, and conflicts

  • Which ethical concepts are most relevant to your technology?
  • How might these ethical concepts be operating on different scales, such as the scale of the individual, the community, the institutions, or broader society?
  • What are the implications of choosing a particular scope?
    • e.g. How might centering the needs of the community miss the needs of some individuals?

Explore Ethical Concept Resources

Get situated to analyze the technology's stakeholders

Explore Identity and Positionality Resources

Assess the individual and community impact

  • Whose interest are best served by this technology, and who has the greatest risk of being harmed?
  • In the cases where “harm” is not the right lens, how might you consider how technologies differentially enable/constrain certain actions and behaviors, or enable/limit possibilities?
  • At the expense of whose labor?
  • Are the concerns of some individuals or groups more important?

Assess the systemic impact

  • In the process of enabling some behaviors while constraining others, how might the technology be encouraging or discouraging certain social discourse and norms (Birhane, 2021)?
  • In what ways does the technology reinforce or challenge ideologies or the status quo?
  • What systemic advantages and disadvantages might this technology amplify?

Acknowledge assumptions in your stakeholder analysis

  • By consulting these perspectives, whose ethics are you valuing? 
  • What assumptions might you have made about your stakeholders?
  • Are you understanding the extent of this harm by engaging with, listening to, and learning from the affected communities (Stop LAPD Spying Coalition and Free Radicals)?

Apply your thinking to your values and actions

Examine your own positionality and values

  • What position do you occupy as a creator? As an employee of a larger organization? As a hypothetical user?
  • What are your values? How might they differ from the people around you?
  • To what extent do our initial beliefs originate in stereotypically held intuitions about groups or cultures (Birhane, 2021)?

Align your actions with your values

  • Does building/interacting with this technology in its current status align with your values?
  • If so, what further questions or perspectives should creators consult to implement the technology with the greatest care and attention to the concerns of all stakeholders?
  • What changes could you make to minimize the immediate harms brought on by this technology?
  • Given that immediate harms are indicative of broader systems of power, how can you support harmed communities as they combat systemic harms? 
  • What’s the dominant person’s role to support justice in marginalized communities? How can you validate and support the agency of marginalized communities as opposed to acting with a savior complex?

Explore Action and Justice Resources

What's next?