Project two
This project will examine both sides of some controversial
issue relevant to the course, and culminate in an in-class debate. In
formulating strategy, it is critical to understand both sides of an issue. Even if your role is to advocate one side,
you must understand the other side. Thus, in this project you will first
formulate the arguments on both sides, but then argue only one side in the
in-class debate. Although groups typically begin with a preconditioned opinion,
they often come away surprised by the strength of the opposing position.
Milestones and deadlines
See the course calendar for due dates for the project
milestones and the date and time of your in-class debate.
Milestone
1. Each group will pick three controversial topics from the
following list, rank them by preference, and post their choices in WebCT. The instructors will then assign each group a topic
trying to follow preferences while ensuring that each topic has two
groups assigned to it to facilitate a debate.
The following list is from last year—it will be
updated well before the milestone 1 due date:
- GSM might be perceived as an
example of a triumph of a standardized government driven approach over a
chaotic market driven shakeout. The Internet vs. ISO networking standards
might be perceived as the opposite. Resolved: the United
States Federal government should
take a more activist role in setting technology standards.
- In the US,
and in many states, information compiled by governments is generally made
available to users at the cost of reproduction. Examples in include census
data, patent data, court decisions, geographic data, etc. In England,
the Crown holds a copyright on such data and licenses its use. Resolved:
the US
model is superior.
- Domain name registration for
com, org, and net, is currently managed by Network Solutions
International. Describe how this came about and outline the current debate
surrounding the Domain Name System. Resolved: the private market will
provide a better solution to domain name registration than a
not-for-profit regulated firm.
- There are two approaches to
content regulation to protect children from pornographic materials:
labeling and age verification. Labeling requires content providers
(or others) to label the materials and parents, or other responsible
parties, to take steps to control access. Age verification requires
content providers to verify age by requiring credit card numbers or digital
certificates before allowing access. Resolved: age verification
is the preferred method.
- Resolved: Business process
patents are a good idea and should be encouraged by both industry and
government. (Note: you may propose variations on the current patent
office policies)
- Resolved: Appropriate
levels of computer and network security are best achieved by marketplace,
and not government action.
- Resolved: Broadband
Internet services to the home provided by cable or telecom companies
should be required to offer a choice of ISP.
Outcome 1: paper and
outline. Each group will research and internally discuss both sides
of this issue.
- Prepare a 5-10 page background
paper outlining the background and issues involved on both sides
of this issue and post it in the "groups and projects" area on
the class Web site. This paper should not advocate a position, but rather
just analyze both sides of the issue. Please do not discuss this research
with the other group working on your project; we want these to be independent
analyses. It is a good idea to wait until just before the deadline before
posting your report.
- Prepare two one-page outlines,
one for the affirmative and one for the negative position, outlining the
key points that you would use in arguing this side of the issue. Do not
post this outline on the web, but rather email it to both instructors.
Also indicate in your email which side of the debate you would prefer
to defend in the debate.
Outcome 2: in-class
debate. You will be informed 48 hours before the actual debate as to which
side you will defend. We will assign you your preference if the two group's
preferences are compatible, or flip a coin if they are not. The debate will
proceed as follows:
- Affirmative
position (10 min)
- Negative
position (10 min)
- Negative
side rebuttal to affirmative position (5 min)
- Affirmative
side rebuttal to negative position (5 min)
- Questions,
comments, and further discussion from the class (10 min)
Obviously you will want to prepare a rebuttal to expected
arguments on the other side, as well as adjust your rebuttal as you hear the
other side’s arguments.
Follow-up.
- After each debate, all
students in groups that did not participate in that debate
please fill out the peer evaluation questionnaire posted on WebCT. In this, you will rate the quality of each
group's arguments in the debate, taking into account the intrinsic
strength of their side of the issue.
- Immediately after your
debate, please post both your group’s ouline
and any powerpoint
presentation you used in "groups and projects" area on the class
Web site for the use of the instructors in grading your project.
- Each member of the group
please assign your 100 points to the other group members based on their
individual contributions to the group’s efforts on this project
(both the backgrounder paper and debate) using a form posted on WebCT.
Grading
The group grade will be based on both backgrounder papers
and performance in the debate, the latter graded by peer review of your fellow
students as well as by the instructors. There will be no designated winner and
loser of the debate, but rather each side will be graded by the quality of
their arguments in advocating their side of the issue, taking into account its
intrinsic strength. The individual grade will be based on the evaluation of
your contribution by other group members.