Biological Inquiry: A New Course and Assessment Plan in Response to the Call to Transform Undergraduate Biology

Author:

Goldey Ellen S.1,Abercrombie Clarence L.1,Ivy Tracie M.1,Kusher Dave I.1,Moeller John F.1,Rayner Doug A.1,Smith Charles F.1,Spivey Natalie W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Roger Milliken Science Center, Wofford College, Spartanburg, SC 29303

Abstract

We transformed our first-year curriculum in biology with a new course, Biological Inquiry, in which >50% of all incoming, first-year students enroll. The course replaced a traditional, content-driven course that relied on outdated approaches to teaching and learning. We diversified pedagogical practices by adopting guided inquiry in class and in labs, which are devoted to building authentic research skills through open-ended experiments. Students develop core biological knowledge, from the ecosystem to molecular level, and core skills through regular practice in hypothesis testing, reading primary literature, analyzing data, interpreting results, writing in disciplinary style, and working in teams. Assignments and exams require higher-order cognitive processes, and students build new knowledge and skills through investigation of real-world problems (e.g., malaria), which engages students’ interest. Evidence from direct and indirect assessment has guided continuous course revision and has revealed that compared with the course it replaced, Biological Inquiry produces significant learning gains in all targeted areas. It also retains 94% of students (both BA and BS track) compared with 79% in the majors-only course it replaced. The project has had broad impact across the entire college and reflects the input of numerous constituencies and close collaboration among biology professors and students.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Education

Reference29 articles.

1. Association of American Colleges and Universities (2008). College Learning for the New Global Century. www.aacu.org/leap (accessed 3 February 2011).

2. Association of American Medical Colleges and Howard Hughes Medical Institute (2009). Scientific Foundations for Future Physicians: Report of the AAMC-HHMI Committee, Washington, DC, and Chevy Chase, MD. www.aacu.org/leap (accessed 3 February 2011).

3. Closing the Assessment Loop

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