Journal article
Engaging Biology Undergraduates in the Scientific Process through Writing a Theoretical Research Proposal
Bioscene (Association of College and University Biology Educators), Vol.39(2), pp.17-24
Dec 2013
Abstract
It has been suggested that research experiences are an important element that should be included in all undergraduate Biology curricula. This is a difficult suggestion to accommodate due to issues with cost, space and time. We addressed this challenge through development of a capstone project in which Biology majors work in groups to develop novel theoretical research proposals with guidance from a faculty mentor. Though students are not directly working at the bench, they are being mentored in aspects of the scientific process such as synthesizing information from the literature, asking novel research questions, constructing logical aims, designing experiments and writing scientifically. Since this project began, we have mentored 417 students in proposal writing and have assessed their experiences through pre-and post-surveys. Students have made gains in several areas, but most notably in their ability to pose novel questions and develop an experimental plan, and in the number of professional relationships they have with faculty members. Most faculty feel positively about mentoring these projects. In our view, this approach allows programs to engage a large number of students in the scientific process, and could be adapted for use in a variety of different university or college environments.
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Details
- Title
- Engaging Biology Undergraduates in the Scientific Process through Writing a Theoretical Research Proposal
- Creators
- Jennifer S StanfordLaura E Duwel
- Publication Details
- Bioscene (Association of College and University Biology Educators), Vol.39(2), pp.17-24
- Publisher
- Association of College and Biology Educators
- Number of pages
- 8
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Biology
- Identifiers
- 991019174722104721