RedVector RV-W122215

12/22/2015: LIVE INTERACTIVE WEBINAR, Ethics for the Practicing Engineer--Organizational Issues, Tuesday, December 22, 2015, 3pm-4pm Eastern

12/22/2015: LIVE INTERACTIVE WEBINAR, Ethics for the Practicing Engineer--Organizational Issues, Tuesday, December 22, 2015, 3pm-4pm Eastern

1 hr. Webinar

Level: Intermediate

Item#: RV-W122215

SME: Ray W. James, P.E., Ph.D., F ASCE

This course has been discontinued
 
This course will focus on issues facing engineers working in large organizations. Case studies of organization-induced problems (such as the two space shuttle failures, the Macondo blowout, the GM ignition switch case) will be used to help participants recognize when organizational problems might cause ethical issues for engineers.
Note: This is a live webinar delivered via WebEx. Session instructions will be emailed to you 24-48 hours prior to the webinar and the morning of the webinar. If you have not received your instructions for any reason please call client support the day of the event. Webinars are live and interactive and students will have the ability to directly interact with and ask questions of the presenter.
Course Objectives
  • Define Normalization of Deviance
  • List consequences of groupthink
  • Compare and contrast proper management decisions vs. proper engineering decisions
  • Describe situations that justify whistleblowing, as well as ramifications.
SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT: Ray W. James, P.E., Ph.D., F ASCE
Ray W. James, P.E., Ph.D., F ASCE Photo
Ray W. James, P.E., holds a Ph.D. in Engineering Mechanics from the University of Texas. He is an Associate Professor of Civil Engineering with research interests primarily in the area of highway bridge engineering. He served as Assistant Dean for Student Services in the Dwight Look College of Engineering at Texas A&M University 2005-2012, and he is presently Associate Head of the Zachry Department of Civil Engineering. In addition to teaching mechanics and structural engineering courses, as the holder of the Bovay Faculty Fellowship, he is the College of Engineering’s course coordinator and regularly teaches a course titled Engineering and Ethics which is required of all engineering majors at Texas A&M. Dr. James has participated in and led College of Engineering study abroad programs in France and Germany.
A registered professional engineer in Texas, Dr. James has authored or co-authored more than 25 publications and is a Fellow and Life Member of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE). He won the Arthur M. Wellington Prize from ASCE in 1988 and the Charles W. Crawford Service Award from the College of Engineering in2009. He is a member of the Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Gamma Tau engineering honor societies. He is a co-author of the 5th edition of Engineering Ethics—Concepts and Cases, the author of a chapter on “Ethics and Business Practices” for Kaplan’s Fundamentals of Engineering—FE/EIT Exam Preparation, 18th ed., and has developed and offered commercial short courses on engineering ethics to professional societies and corporate clients in Texas, Louisiana, and Qatar.