Use of Animation in Teaching Cell Biology

Author:

Stith Bradley J.1

Affiliation:

1. University of Colorado at Denver, Biology Department, Denver, CO 80217

Abstract

To address the different learning styles of students, and because students can access animation from off-campus computers, the use of digital animation in teaching cell biology has become increasingly popular. Sample processes from cell biology that are more clearly presented in animation than in static illustrations are identified. The value of animation is evaluated on whether the process being taught involves motion, cellular location, or sequential order of numerous events. Computer programs for developing animation and animations associated with cell biology textbooks are reviewed, and links to specific examples of animation are given. Finally, future teaching tools for all fields of biology will increasingly benefit from an expansion of animation to the use of simulation. One purpose of this review is to encourage the widespread use of animations in biology teaching by discussing the nature of digital animation.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Education

Reference20 articles.

1. Alberts, B., Johnson, A., Lewis, J., Raff, M., Roberts, K., and Walter, P. (2002). Molecular Biology of the Cell, New York: Garland Science.

2. Aldrich, C. (2003). Simulations and the Future of Learning: An Innovative (and Perhaps Revolutionary) Approach to e-Learning, San Francisco: Pfeiffer.

3. Becker W., Kleinsmith, L.J., and Hardin, J. (2003).The World of the Cell , San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings.

4. Cancer Cell Biology: A Student-Centered Instructional Module Exploring the Use of Multimedia to Enrich Interactive, Constructivist Learning of Science

5. Cooper, G.M., and Hausman, R.E. (2004). The cell: A molecular approach, Sunderland, MA: American Society for Microbiology Press and Sinauer Associates.

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