| Literature DB >> 35051174 |
Stevie A Bain1, Heleen Plaisier1, Felicity Anderson2, Nicola Cook3, Kathryn Crouch4, Thomas R Meagher3, Michael G Ritchie3, Edward W J Wallace2, Daniel Barker1.
Abstract
Over the last few decades, the nature of life sciences research has changed enormously, generating a need for a workforce with a variety of computational skills such as those required to store, manage, and analyse the large biological datasets produced by next-generation sequencing. Those with such expertise are increasingly in demand for employment in both research and industry. Despite this, bioinformatics education has failed to keep pace with advances in research. At secondary school level, computing is often taught in isolation from other sciences, and its importance in biological research is not fully realised, leaving pupils unprepared for the computational component of Higher Education and, subsequently, research in the life sciences. The 4273pi Bioinformatics at School project (https://4273pi.org) aims to address this issue by designing and delivering curriculum-linked, hands-on bioinformatics workshops for secondary school biology pupils, with an emphasis on equitable access. So far, we have reached over 180 schools across Scotland through visits or teacher events, and our open education resources are used internationally. Here, we describe our project, our aims and motivations, and the practical lessons we have learned from implementing a successful bioinformatics education project over the last 5 years.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35051174 PMCID: PMC8775354 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Fig 1Age range of individuals taking part in the bioinformatics workshops.
Nationals graph (top, orange) shows the age range of 152 pupils that have taken part in our SQA National 4/5 level workshop, Bioinformatics: Food Detective. Higher graph (bottom, blue) shows the age range of 1,412 pupils that have taken part in our SQA Higher level workshop, Bioinformatics: The Power of Computers in Biology. This is not the total number of individuals that have participated in the Higher workshop but a subset that filled out evaluation forms. These data represent workshops led by our project staff or volunteers.
Fig 2A map of Scotland showing the schools our project has reached since 2016.
Each school reached is represented by a coloured circle on the map. Some schools have been reached more than once. Circles are coloured according to Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation 2020 (SIMD) decile (1—most deprived to 10—least deprived) [36]. Dark red circles represent schools in the most deprived areas of Scotland according to SIMD, and the white circles represent schools in the least deprived areas. A gradient colour scheme represents those areas in between. The zoomed-in section shows the densely populated central belt region with more clarity. (Map shape file downloaded from https://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/statistics-and-data/geography/our-products/census-datasets/2011-census/2011-boundaries. Contains NRS data Copyright Crown copyright and database right 2021. Contains Ordnance Survey data Copyright Crown copyright and database right 2021.
Percentage of female pupils at different levels of Biology and Computing across Scotland.
| Subject | SQA level | SCQF level | Percentage of pupils that are female |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biology | National 4 | 4 | 63% |
| National 5 | 5 | 67% | |
| Higher | 6 | 66% | |
| Computing | National 4 | 4 | 16% |
| National 5 | 5 | 15% | |
| Higher | 6 | 16% |
These figures are taken from the SQA Statistical Report 2018 [44]. The figures clearly show that Biology is a female-biased subject and that Computing is the opposite with a striking male bias. Therefore, we believe that by targeting Biology classes, we are bringing computation to an audience that would not necessarily receive this education. SCQF levels indicate the difficulty of particular subjects in the Scottish education system. These are comparable to the RQF and CQFW in England and Wales, and the EQF. SCQF levels 4, 5, and 6 are comparable to RQF and CQFW levels 1, 2, and 3, respectively, and EQF levels 2, 3, and 4, respectively (more detail available at https://www.sqa.org.uk/sqa/64561.html).
CQFW, Credit and Qualifications Framework; EQF, European Qualifications Framework; RQF, Regulated Qualifications Framework; SCQF, Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework; SQA, Scottish Qualifications Authority.