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Webinar: 2022 Revised Ethical Guidelines for Statistical Practice: Changes, Content and Connection (Parts 1 and 2)

  • 1.  Webinar: 2022 Revised Ethical Guidelines for Statistical Practice: Changes, Content and Connection (Parts 1 and 2)

    Posted 05-19-2022 02:15
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    Webinar Title: 2022 Revised Ethical Guidelines for Statistical Practice: Changes, Content and Connection (Parts 1 and 2)

     Webinar Abstract: In January 2022, the American Statistical Association’s Committee on Professional Ethics (CoPE) completed the first 5-yearly revision of the “Ethical Guidelines for Statistical Practice”, updating the 2016/2018 version with the approval of the Board. CoPE had three goals for the revision: to update, to clarify, and to make the Ethical Guidelines as inclusive as possible. With these goals in mind, the guidelines make clear that they apply to any statistical practitioners, including statisticians and data scientists in all sectors.

     In this 2-part webinar series, CoPE members and presenters from different domains—industry, government, and academia—will discuss the Principles and Elements of these revised guidelines, and their applicability across practice contexts. Presenters will connect their work experiences during their careers and discuss how the Ethical Guidelines can be applied to support ethical decisions and actions. The audience will learn how to connect these revised Ethical Guidelines into their statistical practice. Part 1 webinar will emphasize the Principles A, B, C, D, and Part 2 will emphasize the Principles E, F, G, H, Appendix.

     Guidelines: https://www.amstat.org/your-career/ethical-guidelines-for-statistical-practice

     Sponsor: ASA Committee on Professional Ethics (CoPE).

     Date and Registration Link: (Must Register in Advance)

    Part 1 Webinar: May 26th, 3-4 pm EDT  (12-1 pm PDT). Guidelines Emphasized: Principles A, B, C, D

    https://amstat.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_XA3QwvpsSKaUKu_9kxOGig

     Part 2 Webinar: June 9th, 3-4 pm EDT  (12-1 pm PDT). Guidelines Emphasized: Principles E, F, G, H, Appendix

    https://amstat.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_vF_Fr95zSe2yafqH8M8XuQ

     After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

     Audience: Any statistical practitioner (member and non-members of ASA) who is interested to learn more about the ASA ethical guidelines and their use in statistical practice across the career and diverse contexts.

     Part 1 Webinar Speakers and what they do: (May 26th, 2022)

    • Jing Cao, Professor of Statistics at Southern Methodist University; Chair, ASA Committee on Professional Ethics (academia).
    • Marcia Levenstein, Vice President (retired), Pfizer; Senior Advisor, Vivli; former Member, ASA Committee on Professional Ethics (industry).
    • Nancy Potok, former Chief Statistician of the United States; CEO of NAPx Consulting and Senior Fellow at The George Washington University Center for Excellence in Public Leadership (government).
    • Harold Gomes (Moderator), Research Statistician at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, CDC; Member, ASA Committee on Professional Ethics.

     Part 2 Webinar Speakers and what they do: (June 9th, 2022)

    • Rochelle Tractenberg, Professor, Georgetown University; Director, Collaborative for Research on Outcomes and –Metrics; Past Chair, ASA Committee on Professional Ethics (academia).
    • Matt Rotelli, Associate Vice President and Head of Bioethics at Eli Lilly and Company; Vice-Chair, ASA Committee on Professional Ethics (industry).
    • Jennifer Ortman, Principal Demographer, Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau (government).
    • Stephanie Shipp (Moderator), Deputy Director and Professor, Social and Decision Analytics Division, Biocomplexity Institute, University of Virginia; Member, ASA Committee on Professional Ethics.

     Disclaimer: Any opinions expressed in this webinar are those of the authors/ presenters and do not constitute or reflect the opinions and policies of the organizations or industries they work for. Authors express their views as members of the statistical community.

     



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    Stephanie Shipp
    Deputy Director and Professor,
    Social and Decision Analytics Division
    Biocomplexity Institute & Initiative
    University of Virginia
    sshipp@virginia.edu
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