Sport research/Ethics

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All research and teaching conducted in Australian institutions must be conducted in accordance with the National Health and Medical Research Council's (NHMRC) National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Research Involving Humans and the legislation introduced to protect the welfare of animals, by ensuring that their use in research and teaching is always humane, considerate, responsible and justified.

Ethics approval is thus needed if a project involves one of the following:


Only human research is further considered here. There are some circumstances where ethics approval is not required in exercise and sport research. One example is where free to air footage is used in descriptional research such as is common in performance analysis.


From Wikiversity:Research ethics: The ethical guidelines for scientific research in the developed world are well established by governmental agencies, professional societies, universities, and journal publishers.

Research ethics try to answer what actions are good, and what actions are bad. The key issues for research published on Wikiversity [and a good general guide for most ethics] are:


Often its useful to think of your proposed research and ethics with these things in mind:



The Process

Research involving humans/human participants requires an approval from a Human Research Ethics Committees, obtained before starting any research, as approval is not granted retrospectively. All human ethics applications at the University of Canberra requires the completion of either the National Ethics Application Form (NEAF) or the University of Canberra Ethics Application Form. The NEAF form is standardised across Australia. Once an individual has registered on the NEAF site (which requires approval from recognised home institutions) the following generic process generally applies (but individuals should check with their home institution).



Whichever the pathway:

Task

  1. Consider whether you need ethics approval or whether it is already granted. If not, register for NEAF if you haven't already and then work through the NEAF form. You will also need to complete a consent form and an information sheet for participants. Remember that everything needs to be in layman terms. Check it all with your supervisor(s).

See also

Resources

University of Canberra guidelines on how to apply for ethics are here

National Health and Medical Research Council

National Ethics Application Form (NEAF)

Hopkin's has general advice about scientific writing and specific advice about grants, proposals, and ethics applications in Writing Pre Data (slideshow).

See also Steve and Amanda Olivier's articles on ethics forms and comprehension in consent forms.

Things to consider when writing an ethics proposal


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This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Monday, February 18, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.