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In order to ensure accurate and valid data collected through professional methods, the Office of Institutional Research adheres to the Code of Ethics adopted by the Association for Institutional Research (AIR).
CODE OF ETHICS
Updated by AIR Board
12/14/01
SECTION I: COMPETENCE.
- I(a)» Claims of Competence. The institutional researcher shall not, in
job application, resume, or the ordinary conduct of affairs, claim or imply a
degree of competency he/she does not possess.
- I(b)» Acceptance of Assignments.
The institutional researcher shall not accept assignments requiring
competencies she/he does not have and for which she/he cannot effectively rely
upon the assistance of colleagues, unless the supervisor has been adequately
apprised or unless he/she would acquire the necessary competence prior to doing
the research. Institutional researchers should use methodologies or techniques
that are new to them only after appropriate study, training, consultation, and
supervision from people who are competent in those methodologies or techniques.
- I(c)» Training of Subordinates. The institutional researcher shall
provide subordinates with opportunities for professional growth and development.
I(d) Professional Continuing Education. The institutional researcher has the
responsibility to develop her/his own professional skills, knowledge, and
performance and to keep abreast of changes in the field.
SECTION II: PRACTICE.
- i) Unbiased Attitude. The institutional researcher
shall approach all assignments with an unbiased atttitude and strive to gather
evidence fairly and accurately.
- ii) Conflicts of Interest. The institutional
researcher should be particularly sensitive to avoid personal conflicts of
interest when performing services.
- II(b)» Use of Accepted Technical Standards. The institutional
researcher shall conduct all tasks in accordance with accepted technical
standards.
- II(c)» Initial Discussions. Before an assignment is begun, the
institutional researcher shall clarify with the sponsor and/or major users the
purposes, expectations, strategies, and limitations of the research.
- II(c)(i)
Special care shall be taken to recommend research techniques and designs that
are appropriate to the purposes of the project.
- II(c)(ii) Special care shall be
taken to advise the sponsor and/or major users, both at the design phase and,
should the occasion arise, at any time during the execution of the project, if
there is reason to believe that the strategy under consideration is likely to
fail or to yield substantially unreliable results.
- II(d)» Identification of
Responsibility. The institutional researcher shall accept responsibility
for the competent execution of all assignments which he/she, or a subordinate,
undertakes, and shall display individual and/or office authorship, as
appropriate, on all such reports.
- II(e)» Quality of Secondary Data. The
institutional researcher shall take reasonable care to ensure the accuracy of
data gathered by other individuals, groups, offices, or agencies on which
he/she relies, and shall document the sources and quality of such data.
- II(f)» Reports.
The institutional researcher shall ensure that all reports of projects are
complete; are clearly written in language understandable to decision-makers;
fully distinguish among assumptions, speculations, findings, and judgments;
employ appropriate statistics and graphics; adequately describe the limitations
of the project, of the analytical method, and of the findings; and follow
scholarly norms in the attribution of ideas, methods, and expression and in the
sources of data.
- II(g)» Documentation. The institutional researcher shall
document the sources of information and the process of analysis in each task in
sufficient detail to enable a technically qualified colleague to understand
what was done and to verify that the work meets all appropriate standards and
expectations.
SECTION III: CONFIDENTIALITY.
- III(a)» Atmosphere of Confidentiality. The institutional researcher
shall establish clear guidelines about confidentiality issues within the
institutional research office.
- III(b)» Storage and Security. The
institutional researcher shall organize, store, maintain, and analyze data
under his/her control in such a manner as to reasonably prevent loss,
unauthorized access, or divulgence of confidential information.
- III(c)» Release
of Confidential Information. The institutional researcher shall permit no
release of information about individual persons that has been guaranteed as
confidential, to any person inside or outside the institution except in those
circumstances in which not to do so would result in clear danger to the subject
of the confidential material or to others; or unless directed by competent
authority in conformity with a decree of a court of law.
- III(d)» Special
Standards for Data Collection.
- III(d)(i) Balancing Privacy Risks Against
Benefits. The institutional researcher shall, at the design stage of any
project, thoroughly explore the degree of invasion of privacy and the risks of
breach of confidentiality that are involved in the project, weigh them against
potential benefits, and make therefrom a recommendation as to whether the
project should be executed, and under what conditions.
- III(d)(ii) Developing
Specific Guidelines. Where appropriate, the institutional researcher shall
adopt a written description of any specific steps beyond the regular guidelines
within the institutional research office that are necessary during a specific
assignment to insure the protection of aspects of privacy and confidentiality
that may be at specific risk.
- III(d)(iii) Disclosure of Rights. The
institutional researcher shall insure that all subjects are informed of their
right of refusal and of the degree of confidentiality with which the material
that they provide will be handled, including where appropriate, the
implications of any freedom of information statute. Any limits to
confidentiality should be made clear.
- III(d)(iv) Apprisal of Implications. The
institutional researcher shall apprise institutional authorities of the
implications and potentially binding obligations of any promise to respondents
regarding confidentiality and shall obtain consent from such authorities where
necessary.
SECTION IV: RELATIONSHIPS TO THE COMMUNITY.
- IV(a)» Equal treatment. The institutional researcher shall promote equal
access and opportunity regarding employment, services, and other activities of
his/her office, without regard to race, creed, gender, national origin,
disability or other accidental quality; and in analysis, demeanor, and
expression shall be alert to the sensitivities of groups and individuals.
- IV(b)»
Development of Local Codes of Ethics. The institutional researcher should
develop and promulgate a code of ethics specific to the mission and tasks of
the institutional research office; and should strive to cooperate with fellow
practitioners in the institution in developing an institution-wide code of
ethics governing activities in common. The institutional researcher should take
reasonable steps to ensure that his/her employers are aware of ethical
obligations as set forth in the AIR Code of Ethics and of the implications of
those obligations for work practice.
- IV(c)» Custody and Archiving. The
institutional researcher shall apply all reasonable means to prevent
irrevocable loss of data and documentation during its immediately useful life;
and, being aware of the role of data as institutional historic resource, shall
act as advocate for its documentation and systematic permanent archiving.
- IV(d)»
Assessment of Institutional Research. The institutional researcher shall
develop and implement regular assessment tools for the evaluation of
institutional research services.
- IV(e)» Institutional Confidentiality. The
institutional researcher shall maintain in strict confidence and security all
information in her/his possession about the institution or any of its
constituent parts which by institutional policy is considered to be
confidential, and shall pursue from Section III of this Code all processes for
that purpose as are appropriate.
- IV(f)» Integrity of Reports. The institutional
researcher shall make efforts to anticipate and prevent misunderstandings and
misuse of reports within the institution by careful presentation and
documentation in original reports, and by diligent follow-up contact with
institutional users of those reports. If an institutional research report has
been altered, intentionally or inadvertently, to the degree that its meaning
has been substantially distorted, the institutional researcher shall make
reasonable attempts to correct such distortions and/or to insist that
institutional research authorship be removed from the product.
- IV(g)» External
Reporting. The institutional researcher has an obligation to the broader
community to submit and/or report accurate data and professionally responsible
interpretive material when requested by legitimate authority, including
federal, state, and other governmental agencies and accrediting bodies. With
respect to private inquiries, such as those from guidebook editors,
journalists, or private individuals, the institutional researcher, should
he/she respond, is bound by the same standards of accuracy and professionally
responsible interpretation.
SECTION V: RELATIONSHIPS TO THE CRAFT.
- V(a)» Research Responsibilities.
- i)The institutional researcher shall seek
opportunities to contribute to and participate in research on issues directly
related to the craft and in other professional activities, and shall encourage
and support other colleagues in such endeavors.
- ii) Acknowledging Creit.
Institutional researchers should take responsibility and credit, including
authorship credit, only for work they have actually performed and to which they
have contributed. They should honestly acknowledge the work of and the
contributions made by others.
- V(b)» Integrity of the Profession. The
institutional researcher should work toward the maintenance and promotion of
high standards of practice.
- i) Institutional researchers should uphold and
advance the values, ethics, knowledge and mission of the profession. They
should protect enhance, and improve the integrity of the profession through
appropriate study and research, active discussion, and responsible criticism of
the profession.
- ii) Institutional researchers should contribute to the
knowledge base and share with colleagues theirknowledge related to practice,
research, and ethics. They should seek to contribute to the profession's
literature and to share their knowledge at professional meetings and
conferences.
- V(c)» False Accusations. Institutional researchers shall take care
not to falsely demean the reputation or unjustly or unfairly criticize the work
of other institutional researchers.
- V(d)» Incompetence of Colleagues.
Institutional researchers who have direct knowledge of a colleague's
incompetence should consult with that colleague when feasible and assist the
colleague in taking remedial action.
- V(e)» Unethical Conduct of Colleagues.
- i)The institutional researcher shall take appropriate measures to discourage, prevent,
identify, and correct unethical conduct of colleagues when their behavior is
unwittingly or deliberately in violation of this code or of good general
practice in institutional research.
- ii) Institutional researchers who believe
that a colleague has acted unethically should seek resolution by discussing
their concerns with the colleague when feasible and when such a discussion is
likely to be productive.
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