- International Fees
International fees are typically 3.12 times the domestic tuition. Exact cost will be calculated upon completion of registration.
Course Overview
The course examines ethical and legal issues related to employment as a computing professional, including tensions between personal interests, interests of the company and interests of clients. This course identifies and examines a range of ethical dilemmas likely to be encountered by professionals in the computing industry. Students will be given the theoretical tools to identify and analyze the issues, evaluate them, and propose solutions. Students will develop competence in moral reasoning through examining case studies that describe ethical and legal problems including: Employment (e.g., resume padding, resume fraud, employment contract, conflict of interests, rights and duties of employers and employees, etc.) Remote work (e.g., productivity, trust, opportunities for promotions, privacy, security, etc.) Contracts (e.g., non-disclosure and non-compete agreements, contract law, freedom and autonomy, etc.) Internet fraud (e.g., cybercrime, fraud, hacking, spoofing, phishing, dark patterns, etc.) Property rights (e.g., intellectual property, trade secrets, copyright, patents, open-source code, screen scraping, selecting software licenses, etc.) Data (e.g., data storage, data privacy, data residency, data custody, professional negligence, legal data protection, hacking, spoofing, phishing, fiduciary obligations, etc.). The course is required for the CST Diploma and will be offered in the spring (May) and winter (January) terms.
Prerequisite(s)
- BCIT ENGL 1177, or 6 credits BCIT Communication at 1100-level or above, or 3 credits of a university/college first-year social science or humanities course.
Credits
4.0
Domestic fees
$959.92
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to achieve the following for each of the topics mentioned in the course description:
- Identify ethical issues in computing-related case studies.
- Explain the principles of key normative ethical theories that are relevant to computing.
- Apply theories to a variety of ethical and legal problems that computing professionals may face.
- State counter arguments in response to proposed solutions and constructively engage alternative views.
- Make a persuasive case for taking a particular course of action to solve a profession-related ethical problem.
Effective as of Fall 2022
Related Programs
Ethics for Computing Professionals (LIBS 7102) is offered as a part of the following programs:
- Indicates programs accepting international students.
- Indicates programs with a co-op option.
School of Computing and Academic Studies
- Computer Systems
Diploma Part-time
- Computer Systems Technology
Diploma Full-time
Course Offerings
Winter 2025
Below is one offering of LIBS 7102 for the Winter 2025 term.
CRN 91604
Dates
Mon Jan 06 - Thu Mar 27
- 12 weeks
- CRN 91604
- Domestic fees $959.92
Status
Seats Available
This course offering has seats available.
Class meeting times
Instructor
TBD
Course outline
Course outline TBD — see Learning Outcomes in the interim.
Important information
- International fees are typically 3.12 times the domestic tuition. Exact cost will be calculated upon completion of registration.
- Please note: (A) RESERVED: LIBS 7102 is reserved for CIT and CST students. (B) The course is composed of 3 mandatory hours of synchronous online teaching on Thursday evenings (via Zoom camera MUST be on) plus 2 hours of online asynchronous teaching per week. FINAL EXAMS: All final exams are in-person and MUST be written at BCIT during the last week of the course. If you live outside the Lower Mainland area you will be required to have an approved proctor to administer the exam. You are directly responsible for any invigilation fees and related costs.
Programs and courses are subject to change without notice.