humanely speaking
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Final Project Presentation for Master's Degree - Orientation on the Humane Treatment of Laboratory AnimalsTRANSCRIPT
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Humanely Speaking
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Final Master’s Presentation 2003
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Developing Instruction on the Ethical Care / Use of Animals Used in Research and Teaching
• Background and Literature
• Problem Definition• Methods and Procedu
res• Results of Evaluation• Conclusions
Movie scenes from Legally Blond 2Copyright MGM 2003
Click here to play in Windows Media Player. Warning! Requires high bandwidth!
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Question – Food for Thought
• Is there really a difference between the fields of– Religion– Law– Social Mores and– Ethics?
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Literature• Best practices for teaching of ethics
– James Rest’s Integrated Model for effecting ethical behavior– Use of the ethical dilemma story and case study
• The narrative imagination– Use of Group interaction
• Cognitive Disequilibrium– Piaget’s cognitive disequilibrium– Kohlberg’s stages of ethical development
• Scaffolding– Vygotsky
– Teaching critical thinking skills– Critical theory
• The humane use and care of research animals– The Animal Welfare Act of 1966– The Guide to the Use and Care of Laboratory Animals
• Best practices in on-line instruction– The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Accessibility Guidelines– Hirumi on Interactivity– Jacob Nielsen on User Control
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Background
• Use of both animals and humans in research has a “checkered history.”
• External regulation has often resulted
Animals Humans
Animal Welfare Act of 1966
The Common Rule of 1991
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Animal Welfare Act of 1966
Regulates institutions and those who would do research with animals– Regulates the protocol– Regulates transportation, housing and daily
care of research animals
Lack of compliance can bring serious consequences – to the individual researcher and – to the entire institution
Purdue’s Animal Care Program
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Purdue’s Animal Care Program
• The Purdue Animal Care and Use Committee (PACUC) reviews protocols
• The Laboratory Animal Program (LAP) provides veterinary care
• Both PACUC and LAP provide training to animal users– General orientation link no longer active as of apr 2008
– Species and technique specific training link no longer active as of apr 2008
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Problem Definition
• PACUC / LAP Orientation– “One size fits all”
• Researchers• Animal caretakers• Undergraduate students
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Problem Definition
• Undergraduate animal workers should understand their roles and responsibilities in using and humanely caring for research and teaching animals.
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Students must understand :
• There must be a protocol and it must be approved by PACUC before animals can be used in research and teaching.
• Protocol procedures cannot be changed without approval from PACUC.
• How to obtain veterinary care for an animal who is sick – and how to catch the cues.
• How to report a noncompliance concern.• How and where to get the appropriate
training for the species and procedure• How to document their training
qualifications• How to sign up for the Occupational
Health Program
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Methods and Procedures
• Instructional Design Model – Rapid Prototyping based on Tripp & Bichelmeyer (1990)
Rapid Prototyping Design ModelProject Steps, Schedule, and Budget
Assess Needs & Analyze Content Set Objectives
October, 2002 – April 2003 June, 2003
My time – free and some PACUC/LAP staff FTE
My time – free and some PACUC/LAP staff FTE
Construct Prototype (Design)
March, 2003 – October, 2003My time – free
Utilize Prototype (Research)
June, 2003 – October, 2003My time – free and some PACUC/LAP
staff FTE
Install and Maintain System
December, 2003ORA and PACUC/LAP staff
FTE
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Prototype One
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Current Prototype
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Evaluative Strategy
• Two identical evaluations– One face to face– One over distance (WebCT)
• Pre-test and Post-test (actual quiz) to see if instruction was in line with the objectives
• Feedback• Interview
– Did they experience any technical problems– Was it fast enough?– Did they have any opinions of the graphics and charts used?– Did the instruction make them want even more to treat animals
ethically and humanely?
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Student Formative Evaluations Results
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Conclusions
While the on-line orientation format presented extremely limited opportunities, it could at least begin to expose students to the development of ethical character. While instruction did not necessarily seem to increase these students’ awareness or desire to treat animals more humanely, it did give them important information they needed to perform their roles in the humane care and use of animals for research and teaching – and they genuinely seemed to appreciate it. Movie scenes from Legally Blond 2
Copyright MGM 2003
Click here to play in Windows Media Player. Warning! Requires high bandwidth.
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Lynx
http://www.purdue.edu/Research/ORA/animals/onlineorientation.shtml link no longer active as of apr 2008
http://secondlooks.hypermart.net/MyPortfolio/EDCI670/PACUC/sitemap.htm
http://secondlooks.hypermart.net/MyPortfolio/ORA/PACUC/prototype5/coursemap.htm
http://ecourses.purdue.edu/webct/entryPage.dowebct
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Questions