| Literature DB >> 27252295 |
Caleb M Trujillo1, Trevor R Anderson2, Nancy J Pelaez3.
Abstract
When undergraduate biology students learn to explain biological mechanisms, they face many challenges and may overestimate their understanding of living systems. Previously, we developed the MACH model of four components used by expert biologists to explain mechanisms: Methods, Analogies, Context, and How. This study explores the implementation of the model in an undergraduate biology classroom as an educational tool to address some of the known challenges. To find out how well students' written explanations represent components of the MACH model before and after they were taught about it and why students think the MACH model was useful, we conducted an exploratory multiple case study with four interview participants. We characterize how two students explained biological mechanisms before and after a teaching intervention that used the MACH components. Inductive analysis of written explanations and interviews showed that MACH acted as an effective metacognitive tool for all four students by helping them to monitor their understanding, communicate explanations, and identify explanatory gaps. Further research, though, is needed to more fully substantiate the general usefulness of MACH for promoting students' metacognition about their understanding of biological mechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27252295 PMCID: PMC4909334 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.15-03-0051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Operational definitions of the MACH componentsa
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aModified from Trujillo .
Topics of mechanistic explanations made by Felix and Petunia in response to assignments before, during, and after the MACH model intervention
| Timing and source | Assessment prompt | Felix’s mechanisms | Petunia’s mechanisms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before intervention | |||
| Exam 2 | Choose any ONE specific example of a protein conformational change that plays an important role in the regulation (control) of a response to light by a plant cell. Write a maximum 1-page essay to explain the mechanism of your selected process. Draw and label a diagram as part of your explanation. Describe all the details you know about the phenomenon. | Phototropism ( | Activation of phytochrome ( |
| During intervention | |||
| In-class worksheet | Hand-write a paragraph to explain how vesicle trafficking occurs within the cell. Draw and label a diagram as part of your explanation. Describe all the details you know about the phenomenon. | Vesicle trafficking | Vesicle trafficking |
| After intervention | |||
| Problem set A | Write a maximum 1-page essay to explain the mechanism of how vesicles traffic within a cell. Draw and label a diagram as part of your explanation. Describe all the details you know about the phenomenon. Use the MACH model ( | Vesicle trafficking | Vesicle trafficking |
| Problem set B | Generate an original explanation about a biological mechanism of your choice using the MACH model mechanism components handouts as guidelines. | Regulation of guard cells | Related to thalidomide ( |
| Exam 3 | Choose any ONE specific example of a mechanism that plays an important role in the response of a photoreceptor in the retina to light. Write a maximum 1-page essay to explain the mechanism of your selected process. Draw and label a diagram as part of your explanation. Describe all the details you know about the phenomenon. Use the MACH model ( | Phototransduction ( | Phototransduction |
| Interview | Today I would like you to talk about cellular mechanisms. Let’s take a moment to think. Take your time and start thinking about these types of processes. Take as much time as you want, don’t rush, just relax and think about them for a while. Try to imagine it; mechanisms inside the cell, think about everything you know about what these are and how do they work. OK, what are you thinking about now? Tell me slowly and clearly, take your time (modified from | Regulation of guard cells | Related to thalidomide |
| Exam 4 | Choose any ONE specific example of a mechanism that you learned about this semester. Write a maximum 1-page essay to explain the mechanism of your selected process. Draw and label a diagram as part of your explanation. Describe all the details you know about the phenomenon. Use the MACH model ( | Mechanism of apoptosis | Related to thalidomide ( |
Figure 1.Drawings made by Felix as part of his exam 2 explanation to address phototropism in plants. Panel A indicates the movement of auxin within the plant cell under different light conditions. Panel B indicates the elongation and bending of the plant stem under different light conditions.
Felix and Petunia’s varied use of the MACH components in exam 2 explanations made before the intervention
| Student | MACH components | Example excerpt with subcomponents indicated within brackets |
|---|---|---|
| Felix | Methods | “This in turn causes the stem to curve toward the light in a phenomenon called phototropism [data observation].” |
| Analogies | “This cascade eventually signals movement of the plant hormone auxin [narrative].” | |
| Context | “…on the opposite side of the plant stem… [biological context]” | |
| How | “When blue light hits phototropin [interaction], or PHOT1 [entity], the protein changes its shape [state, activity], opening a protein kinase site that begins a signal transduction cascade. This cascade eventually signals the movement of the plant hormone auxin [entity, activity]. Based on the direction the light is coming from, the auxin will move away from the light source [activity, organization], moving from cell to cell using polar transport until it reaches the far end of the plant stem [activity, organization]. The higher concentration [state] of auxin on the opposite side of the plant stem will cause [interaction] the cells there to elongate [activity] more rapidly than the lit side [activity, organization].” | |
| Petunia | Methods | Absent |
| Analogies | “This form is biologically active, and it induces a conformational change in the phytochrome protein [narrative].” | |
| Context | “Phytochrome molecules exist in the cytosol of plant cells [biological context].” | |
| “The phytochrome changes conformations in response to red or far-red wavelength, low energy light and contributes to flowering timing and regulation in angiosperms [biological context].” | ||
| “Depending on whether the plant is a short day or a long day plant, it would require higher Pr or Pfr forms respectively [biological context].” | ||
| How | “Phytochrome molecules [entity] exist in the cytosol of plant cells and are often found in higher concentrations [state] in the growing parts of young plants. These phytochromes consist of 2 subunits which each have a chromophore [entity] that absorbs [interaction, activity] light photons [entity]. In its inactive, ground state, phytochrome is in the Pr form [state], which consists of a cis-conformation [state] of the chromophore and has the capability to absorb red light. When red light photons are absorbed [interaction], the chromophore changes from cis to trans [activity] and becomes the Pfr form [state] capable of absorbing far-red light [activity, organization]. This form is biologically active, and it induces a conformational change in the phytochrome protein [activity] that exposes two active regions [organization].” |
Figure 2.Drawings made by Petunia as part of her exam 2 response to explain the activation of phytochrome in plants by light. Panel A indicates a chemical change from the cis to trans configuration of the chromophore. Panel B is a model of the phytochrome protein changing conformation and protein domain exposure depending on whether it is exposed to red or far-red light. Panel C shows a model of activated phytochrome entering the nucleus and affecting transcriptional regulations.
Figure 3.Drawings of the mechanism of phototransduction by Felix on exam 3. Panel A indicates the fluctuations of cGMP levels that could be measured in an experiment on plants with different light exposures. Panel B is a diagram of the molecular mechanism of phototransduction.
Figure 4.A drawing by Petunia from her problem set B response about the mechanism affected by thalidomide, a teratogen. The model depicts thalidomide intercalating with a portion of a DNA molecule within the nucleus. This artifact was retraced with black ink by the researcher to improve image quality.
Figure 5.A drawing by Petunia from her exam 4 response to depict the mechanism affected by thalidomide. This model indicates that, when bound, thalidomide prevents a specific protein from entering the ubiquitination pathway, but thalidomide cannot bind to a functional mutant CRBN protein.
Assertions from analysis of four student cases about their use of the MACH model with sample quotes from each student interviewed
| “So it was kind of annoying having to go through all these things and making sure I understood, like, at certain levels or I meet certain requirements of the MACH model before I could proceed with other questions in homework.” (Felix 2: 168–172) |
| “The MACH model is just a cool way to check, check, check, check… It is a good tool for making sure that I check myself on it when I am explaining.” (Petunia 1: 271–274) |
| “But it definitely helps me to consider all aspects of different mechanisms. Instead of just how it works, or the different parts of it, … you have to go one step deeper and explain why it might happen, or how they [scientists] found out that it happens.” (May 2: 65–72) |
| “I find it best for myself to put it in my own words then look at it with the MACH model and if I don’t know the Methods or the How I can go back and find those.” (Steve 1: 260–261) |
| “It provides a common ground for people to explain things.… With the MACH model, I feel like one of the big outcomes is that it provides an even playing field for everyone … Peers can communicate with one another at a much higher level.” (Felix 2: 341–348) |
| “I just wanted to go on forever but the MACH model definitely facilitated me being efficient. If anything, it would get me through what I needed to while making sure it was a well-rounded explanation of what I had studied.” (Petunia 1: 297–300) |
| “I would say that one of [the outcomes] is [I am] much more comprehensive in my explanations than I used to be by incorporating more elements into them … making the explanation more meaningful by applying the Context and the Analogies. It forms a more complete explanation.” (May 2: 136–143) |
| “I would say people [peers presenting posters] did use it because it kept them focused and helped them communicate a lot better, and get to the point a lot quicker.” (Steve 1: 374–377) |
| “It’s like the more I know, the more I realize that I don’t know things, and that is kind of like really unsettling.… The first few times that I actually applied the MACH model I felt overwhelmed.” (Felix 2: 238–249) |
| “You can read something and not know you are missing anything until you lay it all out and sometimes that is hard to do. And, a model like this you can see each part and break it down. And, this is the part where I might be a little weaker or less in length.” (Petunia 1: 351–354) |
| “I can almost realize holes in my own explanation as I am explaining it to somebody else … The MACH model helps bring it light a little bit more.” (May 2: 81–88) |
| “It helps me see the holes in what I am looking at when I am explaining, when I am formulating an explanation.… and if I use the MACH model to look at those holes and think: Where am I? What is it that I am not comfortable with? I can go back to the research and know what I am looking for and then add that back and then think: Okay, does this sound right? Does this feel good? Do I feel like I am communicating effectively what I want to?” (Steve 1: 437–466) |