Alessandro Lauria: Catalogue data in Autumn Semester 2023 |
Name | Dr. Alessandro Lauria |
Address | Professur Multifunktionsmaterial. ETH Zürich, HCI F 511 Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 1-5/10 8093 Zürich SWITZERLAND |
Telephone | +41 44 633 69 14 |
alessandro.lauria@mat.ethz.ch | |
Department | Materials |
Relationship | Lecturer |
Number | Title | ECTS | Hours | Lecturers | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
327-0313-00L | Materials Characterization I | 3 credits | 3G | A. Lauria, A. Anastasaki | |
Abstract | Introduction into the main spectroscopic methods and their applications to gain compositional and structural information. | ||||
Learning objective | The aim of the course is to enable the students to select and apply the optimal analytical/spectroscopic methods for the identification of organic, inorganic and polymeric materials. | ||||
Content | Particular emphasis is given to qualitative and quantitative analysis of material composition at the atomic/molecular level by mass spectrometry, atomic absorption, vibrational and UV-vis spectroscopy, thermal analysis, nuclear magnetic resonance. The course will include lectures as well as hands-on practical sessions. | ||||
327-2226-00L | Ethics and Scientific Integrity for Doctoral Students (MaP Doctoral School) Priority is given to doctoral students affiliated with the MaP Doctoral School. | 1 credit | 2U | M. Trassin, K. M. Berg, A. Lauria, S. Stepanow | |
Abstract | This course sensitises doctoral students to ethical issues that may occur during their doctorate. After an introduction to ethics and good scientific practice, students are familiarised with resources that can assist them with ethical decision-making. Students get the chance to apply their knowledge in a discipline specific context. | ||||
Learning objective | Doctoral students learn how to identify, analyse and address ethical issues in their own scientific research. In addition, they will reflect on their professional role as scientific researchers. | ||||
Content | Part I The self-paced e-learning course consists of 5 modules: (1) Ethics: Introduction to moral theory (with emphasis on practical guidance regarding decision making) (2) Ethics in Scientific Research: Introduction to ethical issues that occur within scientific research (i.e. regarding authorship, cooperation, data use and sharing, and other aspects that are subject to scientific integrity and good scientific practice). (3) Collecting Resources: A variety of tools and resources that help identify ethical issues are presented and explained (4) Setting up a Strategy: Example examination of a case regarding its ethical scope (students develop their own strategy to examine situations for their ethical implications). (5) Making Decisions: Different ways of addressing ethical issues are presented and explained (i.e. how to make hard choices, or solve ethical dilemmas. But also where to seek advice if needed). Part II The second, face-to-face part of this course focuses on discipline-specific aspects of Materials, Processes and Manufacturing Technologies. It provides an interactive learning environment. Participants get to apply their knowledge, and they are encouraged to reflect on ethical problems and critically discuss them with fellow doctoral students. | ||||
Prerequisites / Notice | For doctoral students only |