Teaching Microbiology by Celebrating Traditional Foods and Cultures from Morocco and Perú

Author:

Meléndez Johana1

Affiliation:

1. Hillsborough Community College, Tampa, Florida

Abstract

According to a report published by the Center for Community College Student Engagement and others, global learning is considered one of the high-impact practices used to increase student engagement and motivation to learn. Engagement and motivation have also been linked to increased learning gains and improvement in the overall learning experience. Furthermore, global learning helps students explore other people’s cultures and worldviews, which is an important skill for students to gain in order to compete and adapt to solve the problems of our global society. Here, I discuss two class activities that faculty can adopt to implement global learning in their courses, with the purpose of engaging and motivating students to learn microbiology while celebrating some traditions from Morocco and Perú. Students researched traditional fermented foods and drinks from Perú and Morocco. Then, they answered guided questions to help them link the food items to microbiological concepts learned in class. For example: normal flora and fermentation were learned as students researched the process of making a Peruvian drink called “ chicha de jora ,” which is made from chewed corn that becomes fermented as it mixes with oral bacteria from saliva. While engaging in global learning, students learned some microbiology concepts; they passed the knowledge on to the campus community with poster presentations held during International Education Week. Based on students’ feedback and participation, I can conclude that teaching microbiology using global learning was engaging, promoted student learning, and motivated students to learn.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Education

Reference10 articles.

1. Center for Community College Student Engagement2013 A matter of degrees: engaging practices engaging students (high-impact practices for community college student engagement) The University of Texas at Austin Community College Leadership ProgramAustin TXAvailable from: http://www.ccsse.org/docs/Matter_of_Degrees_2.pdf. Retrieved August 10 2018

2. Kuh GD2008High-impact educational practices: what they are, who has access to them, and why they matterAssociation of American Colleges and UniversitiesWashington, DC

3. Kuh GD, O’Donnell K2013Ensuring quality & taking high-impact practices to scaleAssociation of American Colleges and UniversitiesWashington, DC

4. Finley A Brown McNair T2013 Assessing underserved students’ engagement in high-impact practices American Association of Colleges and UniversitiesWashington DCAvailable from: www.aacu.org/assessinghips/documents/TGGrantReport_FINAL_11_13_13.pdf. Retrieved August 22 2018

5. Association for American Colleges and Universities2016 Global learning Available from: http://www.aacu.org/resources/globallearning/index.cfm. Retrieved August 22 2018

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