| Literature DB >> 28450448 |
Jeffrey N Schinske1,2, Virginia L Balke3, M Gita Bangera4, Kevin M Bonney5, Sara E Brownell6, Robert S Carter7, Douglas Curran-Everett8, Erin L Dolan9, Samantha L Elliott10, Linnea Fletcher11, Beatriz Gonzalez12, Joseph J Gorga13, James A Hewlett14, Stacey L Kiser15, Jenny L McFarland16, Anjali Misra17, Apryl Nenortas18, Smith M Ngeve19, Pamela A Pape-Lindstrom20, Shannon B Seidel21, Matthew C Tuthill22, Yue Yin23, Lisa A Corwin24.
Abstract
Nearly half of all undergraduates are enrolled at community colleges (CCs), including the majority of U.S. students who represent groups underserved in the sciences. Yet only a small minority of studies published in discipline-based education research journals address CC biology students, faculty, courses, or authors. This marked underrepresentation of CC biology education research (BER) limits the availability of evidence that could be used to increase CC student success in biology programs. To address this issue, a diverse group of stakeholders convened at the Building Capacity for Biology Education Research at Community Colleges meeting to discuss how to increase the prevalence of CC BER and foster participation of CC faculty as BER collaborators and authors. The group identified characteristics of CCs that make them excellent environments for studying biology teaching and learning, including student diversity and institutional cultures that prioritize teaching, learning, and assessment. The group also identified constraints likely to impede BER at CCs: limited time, resources, support, and incentives, as well as misalignment between doing research and CC faculty identities as teachers. The meeting culminated with proposing strategies for faculty, administrators, journal editors, scientific societies, and funding agencies to better support CC BER.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28450448 PMCID: PMC5459264 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-10-0289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Representation of CC BER among all articles in seven BER journals sampled over a 3-year perioda
| Journal | Total papers | CC BER papers | % CC BER |
|---|---|---|---|
| 243 | 1 | 0.4 | |
| 557 | 14 | 2.5 | |
| 239 | 1 | 0.4 | |
| 36b | 1 | 2.8 | |
| 249 | 7 | 2.8 | |
| 257 | 17 | 6.6 | |
| 196 | 16 | 8.2 | |
| Total | 1741 | 57 | 3.2 |
aSee Supplemental Material, Part A, for complete citations for all CC BER articles found.
bThe total for BioScience includes only the number of education-related publications during the specified time period. BioScience includes many basic science articles, features, etc., that are unrelated to BER.
FIGURE 1.Types of publications included among the 57 CC BER papers in our sample. See Supplemental Material, Part D, for descriptions of publication types.
FIGURE 2.Main topics discussed in the 57 CC BER papers in our sample.
Proposed strategies to alleviate, eliminate, or help faculty to avoid constraints on completing CC BER
| Advocate role | CC BER support strategies |
|---|---|
| BER funding agencies | Increase external awards and resources for CC BER researchers Issue calls for proposals centered on CC BER needs Fund professional development for CC faculty Craft program solicitations to explicitly encourage community-based participatory research (CBPR) involving CC researchers Reduces the potential for CCs to be included in grants solely to enhance the attractiveness of proposals rather than serve the needs of the CCs Develop resources to support CC faculty in conducting CC BER For example, assist with the initial development of a centralized IRB that serves many CC campuses Bring together CC BER stakeholders, and specifically CC administrators, to generate ideas and provide feedback Advocate for top-down support of CC BER by reaching out to CC senior administrators Involve CC stakeholders in broad efforts to improve biology and STEM education Sustain efforts to involve stakeholders from all institution types in next steps in STEM education reform (e.g., |
| Leaders and members of networks in BER (e.g., organizers of national meetings or online communities) | Increase opportunities for CC faculty to network within the BER community Advertise activities and opportunities in CC faculty circles Take into consideration the schedules and obligations of CC faculty Create events specifically for CC faculty to build networks of individuals with common experiences and identities Bring on CC stakeholders in advisory roles Provide support for CC faculty to engage in meetings and networks Offer travel awards or reduced registration fees for CC faculty Formally recognize CC faculty exhibiting excellence in teaching and contributions to BER during meetings |
| Journal editors | Formally recognize CC faculty exhibiting excellence in BER Develop resources to support CC faculty in conducting and publishing CC BER Survey CC contributors to determine what information and resources authors would find helpful Include this information in publicly available advice to authors Hold Q&A sessions at national meetings, CC-specific events, or online webinars for CC faculty to learn about the publishing process Provide dedicated spaces to highlight CC BER Create CC BER feature issues Introduce CC-specific columns Issue calls for investigations done at CCs Promote CBPR as a model for collaborations involving CCs Encourage 4-year investigators with an interest in CC BER to include CC stakeholders as collaborators and coauthors |
| CC administrators | Showcase BER efforts in program assessments and evaluations Count CC BER toward an instructor’s required contributions to accreditation, program review, and equity-related efforts Make available resources associated with those efforts to faculty conducting CC BER Increase incentives for conducting CC BER Offer release time or professional development funds as incentives to those wishing to engage in CC BER Increase rewards and honors for CC BER researchers Open additional laboratory, classroom materials, or travel funds for faculty engaging in CC BER Nominate CC BER faculty for national or institutional awards Highlight CC BER efforts at the institution in newsletters or campus-wide events Develop resources to support CC faculty in conducting CC BER Construct shared resources in support of BER (e.g., regional IRB) across colleges/campuses |
| Experienced BER researchers from 4-year institutions | Offer professional development for individuals interested in CC BER Provide professional development in how to collect and analyze data, prepare data for publication, and conduct multiyear or multiclass studies Involve CC stakeholders in advisory boards for advice on projects including CC contexts Collaborate with CC researchers on BER projects of interest to both parties Ground collaborations in CBPR to ensure research is mutually beneficial and effects change for all partners Offer access to resources absent at CCs (e.g., journals, IRB offices, statistical software) Distribute workload to leverage capacities and interests of CC students, faculty, or administrators |
| Experienced BER researchers from CCs | Offer professional development in CC BER focused on CC-specific challenges and opportunities. For example, Navigating data collection and analysis for lower-enrollment courses Leveraging existing CC administrative structures for BER Balancing CC BER and teaching load Nucleate an institutional or regional community of CC individuals interested in BER BER journal clubs Sharing classroom evidence-collection strategies Exploratory collections of evidence on a common research question across classrooms Mentor other CC faculty in exploring BER Experienced CC BER researchers have insight into what questions are most relevant for entering researchers to pursue, the advantages and pitfalls of conducting CC BER, and the nuances of working within the broader BER community |
| CC faculty interested in engaging in CC BER | Form journal clubs to discuss current BER work Approach administrators to see how CC BER might fit into existing programmatic or institutional needs Frame CC BER as part of existing institutional initiatives Explore resources that might exist for contributions to accreditation, equity initiatives, or program reviews Access online resources about how to conduct BER. For example, Enhancing Scholarly Work on Teaching and Learning: Professional Literature That Makes a Difference ( Scientific Research in Education ( Grappling with the Literature of Education Research and Practice ( Initiate Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SOTL) efforts as a gateway to BER SOTL papers are typically more narrowly focused than BER, often focusing on a single activity in a single classroom ( Provides a manageable stepping-stone to more in-depth BER Capitalize on the unique assets of CCs related to BER Use existing assessment practices as a starting point for BER or SOTL Collect demographic data and disaggregate assessment results to examine how student learning varies by student group Reach out to institutional researchers for tools and advice Initiate collaborations with CC faculty at other CCs Provides social support from colleagues in similar positions Allows pooling of resources and capacity Increases sample sizes if collaborating on a common project Initiate collaborations with university BER and education researchers University BER researches are often interested in CC contexts, but lacking in CC connections University education researchers and psychologists are often excited to work directly with STEM faculty and bring expertise in social science techniques Potential access to journals, IRBs, etc. Invite CC students to collaborate on BER or SOTL projects Provides CC students opportunities for authentic research experiences Helps to distribute work among many hands Students bring unique insights and contributions as it relates to assessing their college |