A Case Study in Arts-Informed Ethics Education in the Nuclear and Radiological Sciences
Nicole E. Martinez, Sarah E. Donaher, Jonathan S. Nagata, Lindsay Shuller-Nickles

TL;DR
This paper explores using art in a graduate course to help students in nuclear science reflect on ethical and social issues.
Contribution
It introduces a graduate-level 'nuclear culture' course using arts-informed methods to enhance ethical and social reflection in nuclear science education.
Findings
Students engaged deeply with ethical and social issues through art-based learning.
Themes like ethics, empathy, and societal impact emerged from student and instructor feedback.
Arts-informed approaches can improve graduate education in nuclear and radiological sciences.
Abstract
There is a need for cross-disciplinary researchers and professionals in the radiological sciences who can navigate complex interconnected ethical-social-technical issues, communicate across a wide audience in consideration of multiple stakeholder perspectives, and remain self-critical, aware, and reflective of the field with the intent of continuous improvement within the broader profession. Given that traditional curriculum related to the nuclear and radiological sciences emphasizes the technological, scientific aspects of radioactivity and ionizing radiation, a graduate-level course in “nuclear culture” was developed that employs various forms of art, expression, and material culture as a vehicle for encouraging deeper, dedicated reflection on related social and ethical issues. This paper provides a description of course structure and representative content, along with discussion of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChemical Safety and Risk Management · Science Education and Perceptions · Nuclear Issues and Defense
