RESPONSIBLE CONDUCT OF RESEARCH
East Tennessee State University recognizes that maintenance of the
highest standards of ethics in research is essential to the
advancement of knowledge and to retaining public trust in the
research and scholarly activities conducted by its faculty,
students and staff. To this end all faculty, staff and students
engaged in research and scholarly activities are strongly
encouraged to read the documents linked from this page, especially
the “ETSU Guidelines on the Responsible Conduct of
Research” and the “ETSU Policy on Misconduct in
Research and Scholarship” (see below). The former provides
the context for ethical conduct of research at ETSU and every
person conducting research at ETSU should be familiar with the
Policy on Misconduct in Research and Scholarship.
CITI Course in the RCR
ETSU also provides the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) Course in the Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR). All individuals involved in research and scholarly activity at ETSU are encouraged to take the appropriate CITI course. Note that those who are personnel on some types of grants funded by the federal government (e.g. NIH center and training grants) are required to complete this or some other form of formal training in RCR. For those of you who have been certified for use of human or animal research subjects, this is a companion course and the format is very similar to CITI training in those areas.
You do not have to complete the entire course at one sitting. A certificate is available to print/save upon completion. The directions are self-explanatory, but if you have difficulties or questions please contact the Office of the Vice Provost for Research (439 6000).
The basic CITI RCR course includes the following topics:
The other RCR options include:
Research students, staff and faculty are encouraged to complete the CITI Course in the Responsible Conduct of Research and other RCR training options in the area of specific interest or expertise. The course is flexible enough that classroom instructors of research methods courses can use this online tutorial as an adjunct to class instruction.
For training, please go to:
CITI RCR Training Module
ETSU Guidelines on the Responsible Conduct of
Research
PREAMBLE
A central responsibility of a university is to promote,
encourage, enable, and conduct high quality research. East
Tennessee State University is committed to quality research, and to
the responsible conduct of that research. The university
expects everyone working here — individual researchers, lab
managers, technicians, and students — to embody the highest
standards of research excellence, to exhibit exemplary moral
behavior as researchers. However, It is not enough to hold
employees and students to high ethical standards. The
institution will actively seek ways (a) to encourage careful
thought about our ethical responsibilities as researchers, (b) to
reward exemplary behavior and to censure questionable behavior, and
(c) to promulgate these expectations to all students and everyone
within the university’s employ.
For full text, please see :
ETSU Guidelines on the Responsible Conduct of
Research (PDF)
ETSU Policy for Misconduct in Scholarship and Research
Maintenance of the utmost integrity in scholarship, research, and teaching is fundamental to successful accomplishment of the mission of East Tennessee State University. Furthermore, the privilege of academic freedom intrinsic to scholarship and research can only continue if public trust in the integrity of these activities is maintained.
For full text, please see:
Misconduct in
Scholarship & Research ETSU Policy
ETSU Policy for Interactions with Pharmaceutical Companies
The relationship between industries and the medical profession is under increased scrutiny. While pharmaceutical and medical device companies make many meaningful contributions to medical education, there is potential for abuse and inappropriate benefit to the medical profession. It is important to address the public perception of this relationship, especially in graduate medical education.
For full text, please see:
Ethical
Guidelines Policy for Interactions with Pharmaceutical
Companies
Other Helpful Information:
A Guide to
the Determination of Authorship
On Being a Scientist: Responsible Conduct of
Research
AAAS Resource Site - a website for students,
researchers, administrators, and policymakers. bringing together a
diverse array of resources, including authorship, use of research
animals, peer review, data sharing, protection of human subjects,
conflict of interest and responsible conduct in research education
Addressing Whistle-Blowing Issues - a
video-driven illustration with lessons showing students how to
anticipate the issues that would arise in a case of possible
misconduct and to think ahead about what to do. Developed at
the University of Alabama - Birmingham, based on an actual
misconduct case