CS 3111 Computer Ethics
Fall 2024 Podcast Guidelines
Podcast is due Sunday November 17 by 11:59 pm
Podcast is due Sunday November 17 by 11:59 pm
You will create a 15-20 minute podcast where you pose 3 - 5 ethical dilemmas for you and your guests to discuss. Your goal for each of these scenarios is to discuss "What's the Right Thing to Do?
You should create the scenarios that you discuss, do not use the examples from Justice, etc. The scenarious should be drawn from your own life during approximately the last year. These can be things you have experienced, observed, or seen in popular culture or online. They can all be closely related and on the same topic, or they can be wide ranging. Feel free to focus on a topic or topics where you have a personal interest. Your dilemmas can relate to computing and technology although they do not have to.
During your podcast you will be the moderator, and you should have two or more guests who will hopefully not always agree. If they do it might mean your dilemmas are not really dilemmas and have obvious moral solutions, so please craft scenarios where some disagreement or discussion seems likely, at least at first. Your guests may be anyone, except they can not be members of our class.
As moderator you should prod your guests to elaborate on their ideas and to consider alternative points of view. You should also make connections to our Philosphical Foundations when appropriate. If you are unsure how to do this consider listening to an episode of The Public Philosopher with Michael Sandel for a good model of how to moderate. Please focus on having a conversation and do not rely on scripted remarks. You should be prepared with your scenarios, but otherwise focus on having a conversation with your guests and not following a script (which sounds terrible and is not engaging).
You should start your podcast by introducing yourself. Give your name, major, year at UMD, and anything else you think might be of interest to your audience. Then explain the basic idea behind the podcast, and have your guests introduce themselves. They may say what they like but at a minimum their name and major (if they are UMD students). They can say more if they like.
After that your goal is to encourage a lively discussion. You should have have your scenarios ready to pose, and allow enough time to discuss them but please make sure you get through at least three of them during your podcast.
Your podcast must be somewhere from 15 to 20 minutes long. Podcasts under 15 minutes will lose 1 point for not following these guidelines. Podcasts that run long are ok so long as the discussion remains engaging. Keep things moving and make sure your guests do not start to repeat themselves or drift off topic.
Podcasting Considerations
Please make sure you record in a quiet space. Dorm rooms and public areas are often too noisy. Consider using a library study room or some other private space for recording.
You will need a good quality microphone so that everyone can be heard, so please consider using the resources of the UMD Media Hub.
Make sure to create a test recording to make sure the sound quality is reasonably good and that there is minimal or no background noise and that audio levels are consistent for all guests (someone should not be too loud while another is too soft).
You will submit your podcasts as mp3 files to Canvas. There is nothing to submit other than the audio recording of your podcast.
Your podcast is due by 11:59 pm on the date shown on the Class Schedule. A podcast submitted 1 - 24 hours after the deadline will automatically lose 1 point (of a possible 5), and will then lose another 1/2 point per full school day it is late.
Grading
Your podcast will be graded on a 5 point scale, where 1 point is awarded for each of the following :
Your podcast is engaging, and not boring to listen to. If you are bored when recording the podcast, your guests will be bored and it will be boring to listen to. Your podcast will be a success if you are well prepared and enthusiastic.
Your podcast is personal, and could really have only been prepared and presented by you and your guests. This means that it includes perspectives and ideas that are unique to your group, and makes connections between ideas that are not obvious.
Your podcast follows the guidelines for length given above, and does not include repetition or filler. Do not pad your podcast content in to reach the time length minimums, instead find more interesting ideas to discuss.
Your podcast is factually correct. Make certain any facts you present are true and not based on misinformation or misconceptions. If you have doubts about something a guest is saying, make sure to raise those concerns and have your guest explain.
Your podcast is relatively clear and easy to listen to. This does not mean perfect, but it means that the listener should not be distracted by your audio quality. Make sure you record in a quiet location with a good quality microphone, and that all your guests are able to be heard on the recording. Make a short test recording to verify this before recording the podcast.