| Literature DB >> 27146158 |
Sarah C R Elgin1, Gita Bangera2, Sean M Decatur3, Erin L Dolan4, Laura Guertin5, Wendy C Newstetter6, Elvyra F San Juan7, Mary A Smith8, Gabriela C Weaver9, Susan R Wessler10, Kerry A Brenner11, Jay B Labov12.
Abstract
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27146158 PMCID: PMC4909350 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-03-0118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Figure 1.Cover of the convocation report.
Case studies presented in the report by name, discipline, focus, and reach (individual faculty vs. national partnerships)
| Initiative (page numbers in convocation report) | Discipline(s) targeted | Local or national in scope? | Brief comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Science Education Alliance—Phage Hunters (SEA-PHAGES) (p. 18) | Life sciences | National collaborative | First-year students isolate bacteriophages whose genomes are then sequenced and annotated. Students routinely discover new viruses. Data are collected from multiple sites and made available to all participants. |
| Genome Consortium for Active Teaching (GCAT) (p. 23) | Synthetic biology | National, but with faculty focus on specific topics of interest to them | Data from individual campuses are shared across the initiative. |
| Genomics Education Partnership (pp. 24–25) | Genomics, bioinformatics, and evolution | National collaborative | Focuses on research around |
| Genome Solver (p. 25) | Microbial genomics and bioinformatics | National collaborative, but permits individual faculty to establish their own protocols under this umbrella | Focuses on analyzing data from the NIH Microbiome initiative. |
| Place-Based Research (pp. 32–33) | Research on campus-based issues | Currently courses at the University of Wisconsin–Madison | Students conduct research on university issues such as energy use, food supply chains, and waste streams in collaboration with the University’s Office of Sustainability. |
| Expanding the Use of Online Remote Electron Microscopy in the Classroom to Transform Undergraduate Education (pp. 34–36) | Geosciences | Currently a partnership among four colleges and universities in Florida | Students send samples to instrumentation labs and conduct individual research projects using the data obtained. |
| DNA Learning Center (pp. 36–40) | DNA barcoding | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York | Students employ DNA barcoding to examine and resolve many kinds of questions, including identification of species in a habitat, food labeling. |
| Science Education for New Civic Engagements and Responsibilities (SENCER) (p. 39) | Disciplinary, multidisciplinary, and interdisciplinary | National, with regional hubs that focus on different research issues | Students engage in research based on regional or global issues whose boundaries often extend beyond the STEM disciplines. |
| Virtual Internships (pp. 40–42) | Multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary | Individualized by instructors | Provides simulated experiences that give students the opportunity to both take and reflect on their actions to solve real-world problems, and develop ways of thinking about real-world practice. |
| Vertically Integrated Projects (pp. 41–42) | Engineering, multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary | Currently 15 colleges and universities | Undergraduates have opportunities to participate in research for up to 3 years and help mentor newer members of the group. |
| Rock Art Sustainability Index (RASI) (pp. 46–47) | Anthropology | Mesa Community College, Arizona | Students use the RASI to help determine which local Native American rock panel artworks are in greatest danger of eroding to allow for decisions about how to best use resources for preservation. In collaboration with the National Park Service. |
| Center for Authentic Science Practice in Education (CASPiE) (pp. 48–51) | Chemistry | Currently 5 centers | Offers guidance on developing, implementing, and evaluating course-based models of research for first- and second-year undergraduates in chemistry. |
| Scaffolding for Undergraduate Biology Using Yeast (p. 49) | Biological sciences | North Carolina Central University | Designed to involve students underrepresented in STEM fields with authentic research experiences as part of three introductory biology courses. |
| The Nature of Life (pp. 51–54) | Life sciences | University of Minnesota–Twin Cities | A required 2-yr, two-credit course for all entering biology majors that starts in the summer before the students’ first year at the university. |
| Freshman Research Initiative (pp. 52–53) | Multiple disciplines | University of Texas–Austin | Offers first-year students in the College of Natural Sciences an opportunity to conduct original research under the guidance of a research faculty member and graduate students through a three-semester sequence of courses and laboratory work. |
| Community College Undergraduate Research Initiative (pp. 56–57) | Multiple disciplines | National | Exposes community college students to real-world science through hands-on research experiences. Students take an introductory course in which they are taught basic scientific procedures while investigating a specific case study and then work together to investigate questions developed from a case study. |
| Discovery-Enriched Curriculum (pp. 61–63) | All disciplines | City University of Hong Kong | Institution-wide program that requires all 11,000 students who matriculate to make an original discovery or create intellectual property. |
| Interdisciplinary Science Learning Labs (pp. 63–65) | All disciplines | University of Delaware | Engages undergraduates in all phases of scientific research through the development of facilities that foster the integration of teaching, learning, and research in a holistic learning environment. |
| Center for Interdisciplinary Biological Inspiration in Education and Research (CIBER) (p. 64) | Engineering design inspired by biological structures and functions | University of California–Berkeley | Creates a community of next-generation scientists and engineers who can work together to conceive and execute innovative multidisciplinary work by engaging undergraduates to formulate and execute novel designs in engineering that are informed and inspired by biological principles and phenomena. |
| First-Year Innovation and Research Experience (FIRE) (pp. 65–68) | All disciplines | University of Maryland–College Park | Modeled after the Freshman Research Initiative at the University of Texas (see description above), FIRE provides first-year students with authentic research experiences, broad mentorship, and institutional connections, but with an expansion to disciplines beyond the STEM fields. |
| Dynamic Genome Project (pp. 66–67) | Genomics and molecular biology | University of California–Riverside | Provides undergraduates with the same types of experimental activities as graduate students while they learn fundamental concepts in genomics and molecular biology in a two-course sequence that is required for biology majors. |