Postgraduate Module

Research Ethics in
Applied Linguistics

Navigating the moral principles that guide integrity, respect, and responsibility in academic inquiry.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this reading, you will be able to:

Understand the core principles of ethical research

Identify common ethical issues in academic studies

Learn how to protect research participants

Prepare for ethical approval and informed consent

🧭 What Are Research Ethics?

Research ethics refer to the moral principles that guide how researchers conduct their work. It is not just red tape; it is the foundation of trustworthy science.

Ethical research is based on respect for human dignity, honesty, fairness, and responsibility.

Why It Matters

  • Protect participants from harm
  • Ensure credibility & integrity
  • Gain public trust
  • Avoid plagiarism & misconduct
  • Comply with legal requirements
⚖️

The 5 Core Principles

The pillars of ethical conduct in linguistics research

Informed Consent

  • Voluntary agreement to participate.
  • Fully informed about risks and rights.
  • Must be written (signed/digital).

Confidentiality

  • Protect personal data vigorously.
  • Use pseudonyms/codes in reports.
  • Secure storage (encryption/passwords).

Right to Withdraw

  • No pressure to join.
  • Free to leave at any time.
  • No penalty for withdrawing.

Minimizing Harm

  • Avoid physical/emotional harm.
  • Protect vulnerable populations (minors, students).

Honesty & Integrity

  • Report data truthfully (no fabrication).
  • Acknowledge collaborators.
  • Avoid plagiarism via proper citation.
  • Use tools like Mendeley/Zotero correctly.

📋 Ethical Procedures Workflow

1. Ethical Approval

Submit proposal to institution’s ethics committee/supervisor before data collection.

2. Informed Consent Form

Prepare a document explaining study, rights, usage, and contact info.

3. Data Management Plan

Describe secure collection, storage, usage, and deletion methods.

4. Thesis Statement

Include an "Ethical Statement" in your methodology chapter.

⚠️ Unethical Research Practices

Practice Why It’s Unethical
Fabricating data Misleads readers and invalidates the study.
Plagiarism Stealing others' intellectual property.
Ignoring informed consent Violates autonomy and legal responsibility.
Real names without permission Breaches privacy and confidentiality.
Hiding conflicts of interest May introduce bias and reduce trust.

🧠 Reflection Questions

What ethical challenges might you face?

Consider power dynamics (teacher-student), sensitive topics, or potential data leaks.

How will you ensure data protection?

Think about password protection, cloud security, and when you will destroy the raw data.

Have you planned for informed consent?

Draft your consent form early. Ensure the language is simple enough for your participants to understand.

📄 Templates You May Need

  • Sample Informed Consent Form
  • Sample Ethics Approval Form
  • Sample Ethical Statement

Download from Moodle Resources

📚 Further Reading