| Literature DB >> 33884044 |
Leigh Ann Samsa1, Carlos C Goller2.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33884044 PMCID: PMC7976733 DOI: 10.1128/jmbe.v22i1.2153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Microbiol Biol Educ ISSN: 1935-7877
Examples of uses of the Divide and Conquer technique.
| Use | Field-tested activity examples |
|---|---|
| Microbiology and biology topics |
Complex, detailed topics ▪ Cas9 variants ▪ CRISPR diversity Broad topics ▪ Protein visualization assays ▪ Model organisms |
| Document analysis |
Syllabus exploration Analyze selected literature or news articles |
| Discussion preparation |
Examples of biotechnology CRISPR-Cas9 patent battle timeline |
Tips for use and modification of Divide and Conquer.
| Problem | Tip |
|---|---|
| Group assignments | Unlike most collaborative learning approaches, we recommend that groups are randomly assigned for Divide and Conquer activities. This helps reinforce the temporary nature of the groupings, which itself gives an “end in sight” for incompatible groupings and maximizes student opportunities to build skills in working with new teammates. Students can be divided into groups ahead of time or during class as part of the live presentation. A random team generator (e.g., |
| Students express concern about the need to “perform” on the spot to complete the activities | Reassure students that there is no expectation for perfection, that class time was designated for the activity to help level the playing field for students who do not have as much out of class time for school work, and that learning to work with a team and within time constraints is a useful skill. |
| Students accidentally delete a slide | Access the Google Slide’s version history. Then, locate and copy the deleted slide. Return to the current version and paste the delete slide into the appropriate portion of the slide deck. |
| The quality of student-generated slides is below expectations | Try setting the stage with an example slide, but be cognizant that students tend to copy the format of the example slide, so this can influence their creative process. |
| Groups complete the assignment at different rates | Circulate throughout the class and differentiate instruction by adding challenge questions to groups who finish early and provide extra support to groups who are struggling. A simple, easy-to-remember differentiation is for students to add notes for their classmates in the speaker notes section of their slide. |
| Insufficient bandwidth in the classroom | Ask students to use one computer per group to limit the number of devices that are using the internet in the classroom. Or, ask students to supplement their slide research using their phone’s network connection. |
| Over 100 individuals would need to access the slides at the same time | Scale up with multiple documents and select one document for presentation to the class. Additionally, assign groups based on seating. For example, a lecture hall with 150 students may have two sections of seats. The instructor prepares two copies of the Divide and Conquer activity Google Slide deck and instructs students to access one or the other based on their seating. Students are asked to form groups with their neighbors and “claim” an activity slide by opening, editing, and adding their names to the slide. |
| Making appropriate accommodations for student accessibility | As a nongraded, in-class activity, this can be treated as a formative assessment and can be easily adapted to most individuals’ needs. The Google Slide deck is compatible with screen readers. Students who may need extra time can be notified of the assignment before class and provided opportunity to prepare. |
| Course is in online-only format | As part of the assignment instructions, assign students to breakout rooms if the course is in a synchronous online format; if the course is asynchronous, ask students to arrange to meet synchronously as a group and set a timer for the designated activity duration. Students can present their findings to the class in a synchronous virtual meeting or asynchronously through a video-recording and -sharing resource (e.g., FlipGrid). Alternatively, the presentation portion can be replaced with an assessment that requires students to examine other groups’ slide content. |
FIGURE 1Schematic of instructor preparation for Divide and Conquer. (Top) The instructor creates a new Google Slide deck with two instructional slides to state learning outcomes, instructions and groups and a set of 4 to 10 activity slides. Each activity slide will be completed by one group of students. (Bottom) The instructor generates a link to the slides that gives viewer permissions to those who follow the link and shares the link with students.
FIGURE 2Schematic illustrating implementation of Divide and Conquer in the classroom. (Left) The instructor opens the slides for editing by changing the link-sharing settings (no need to distribute a new link). During class, student groups complete their assigned activity and edit their slide to generate a resource on their activity. (Right) When time is up, the instructor closes the slides for editing and student groups present their findings to the class.