| Literature DB >> 35294252 |
Erin Stanfield1, Corin D Slown1, Quentin Sedlacek2, Suzanne E Worcester3.
Abstract
Course-based undergraduate research experiences (CUREs) introduce research leading to skills acquisition and increased persistence in the major. CUREs generate enthusiasm and interest in doing science and serve as an intervention to increase equity and participation of historically marginalized students. In the second-semester laboratory of our introductory sequence for biology and marine science majors at California State University Monterey Bay (CSUMB), instructors updated and implemented a field-based CURE. The goals of the CURE were to promote increased scientific identity, systems thinking, and equity at a Hispanic-serving institution (HSI). Through the CURE, students engaged in scientific writing through a research paper with a focus on information literacy, critical thinking, and quantitative reasoning as important elements of thinking like a scientist. Course exams also revealed that students showed gains in their ability to evaluate a new biological system using systems thinking. More broadly, because such field-based experiences demonstrate equity gains among Latinx students and a much greater sense of scientific identity, they may have impacts beyond introductory biology including in students' personal and professional lives.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35294252 PMCID: PMC9508920 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.20-12-0300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.955
FIGURE 1.Visual metaphor for the ripple effects of a CURE for increasing many aspects of the STEM undergraduate experience with outcomes extending far beyond the course.
FIGURE 2.Student demographics at CSUMB relative to the entire California State University system, and undergraduate students in the United States (CSUMB IAR 2019). The percentage of Latinx students at CSUMB (dark blue), the percentage of Latinx students within the California State System (lighter blue), and the percentage of Latinx students in the United States (gray).
FIGURE 6.Mean (±SD) of the pre/ post CURE assessments of the proportion of students who mastered the ability to create a specific and testable research question (t(145) = −7.4005, p < 0.0001) and the mean (±SD) proportion who mastered creating an appropriate figure demonstrating an analysis that answers their research question (t(194) = −7.947, p < 0.0001).
Dune Lab learning outcomes and assessments throughout the multi-week experience resulting in the final Dune research paper for formal evaluation for effectiveness
| Research and learning outcomes | Assessment direct evidence |
| Develop sense of ownership and investment in project through directed learning of project context | Formative assessment class presentations (videos) |
| Identify multiple commonly observed dune plantsQuantitatively estimate plant abundance with a point intercept transect technique | Formative assessment in-field plant quiz and demonstration of data collection |
| Enter, organize, and quality check collected data | Submission of completed data-collection and data summary spreadsheet |
| Access, search through, select, and summarize a subset of data related to preliminary question | Submission of preliminary research question and draft figures |
| Revise to form an ecologically relevant and testable research question | Preliminary submission and final Dune CURE research paper |
| Analyze patterns in the data to address the research question | |
| Produce figures and other data summaries to evaluate the research question | |
| Participate in the community of scientific research through:
finding, evaluating, and citing primary scientific literature relevant to the research question In-class peer review | In-class assessment and final Dune CURE research paper |
| Recognize and relate to the ecological and/or restoration context of research | Final Dune CURE research paper |
| Communicate in the style of a scientific journal article with results and discussion sections that follow principles of scientific writing | |
FIGURE 3.Students at the whiteboard creating their figures for the Dune CURE.
Affective attitudes assessed through constructs from the survey instrument for the Dune CURE
| LCAS constructs | URSSA constructs | PITS constructs |
|---|---|---|
| Collaboration | Thinking and Working Like a Scientist | Ownership |
| Discovery and Relevance | Personal Gains | Self-Efficacy |
| Iteration | Attitudes and Behaviors | Networking |
FIGURE 4.Mean change (±SD) in performance of individual students after completing the CURE relative to the beginning of the semester on the same multiple-choice questions (t(166) = −3.144, p = 0.0011) and nonstatistically significant (t(166) = −1.126, p = 0.130) marginal gains in evaluating the ecological and evolutionary context of plant restoration.
FIGURE 5.After completion of Dune CURE, student performance on constructed-response final exam essay question investigating evolution of plant adaptations given selective environmental factors.
FIGURE 7.Summary of assessment comparing preliminary research question and figure before feedback, peer review, and revision with final research questions and figures.
FIGURE 8.Summary of assessment of final research paper.
FIGURE 9.Mean (±SD) student-generated pre-CURE career interests (data collected from students across all semesters).
FIGURE 10.Mean (±SD) of the comparing before and after implementation of the Dune CURE academic equity index (AEI) for Latinx students passing (t(4) = −1.90, p = 0.064 vs. receiving “A’s” and “B’s” (t(4) = −2.43, p = 0.036) comparing before and after implementation of the Dune CURE.