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Cyberlearning at Community Colleges www.c3cyberlearning.ning.com Navigating the cyberlearning landscape: A case study involving teaching the central dogma of biology Justin Pruneski Sam Donovan Department of Biological Sciences Introduction Cyberlearning—learning that is mediated by networked computing and communications technologies—is increasingly influencing undergraduate science education and is providing useful new models for engaging students (Borgman, 2008). Finding effective and innovative ways to harness the immense resources available on the web and applying them to learning is a significant challenge facing educators today. This project sets out to identify and characterize ways that college biology faculty can use digital resources to engage students in meaningful learning (Jonassen et al. 2003). We focus on a single core topic area, the central dogma of molecular biology, highlighting example resources and strategies that can be applied to other topics and courses. Our goal for the project is to raise faculty awareness about the availability of diverse online resources and suggest innovative teaching approaches that take advantage of the new information landscape. This poster contains a sample of the materials that have been compiled, a pedagogical characterization of the types of resources available, a discussion of search strategies for finding resources and suggestions for their use in teaching undergraduate biology. Examples of cyberlearning resources How can cyberlearning facilitate meaningful learning? Listed below are some practices that cyberlearning activities can mediate or encourage. They emphasize student-centered approaches where learning is active, intentional, constructive, authentic, and cooperative (Jonassen et al. 2003). Providing high-quality content – A variety of learning resources can be found online for any given topic. Student-directed learning – Students are actively involved in the obtaining and processing of information. Collaboration – Students work together to build more meaningful work than each student could achieve on his/her own. Using scientific data – Students can view, manipulate, and interpret real scientific data in order to test hypotheses and form conclusions. Modeling professional practices – Through activities such as case studies and simulations, students practice skills useful in their future careers. Relevance – Cyberlearning activities often use real-world examples to put topics into the correct context. Access to multiple resources and perspectives – By comparing and contrasting multiple resources, they can achieve more understanding than simply analyzing one resource (see example in top right panel). Interdisciplinary investigations – Cyberlearning skills can be used in any subject and often blend many different disciplines. Adaptability – Many resources can be customized to meet the specific needs of the teacher or class. Making the learning process visible – Both teachers and students can monitor student work and reflect on what works and what does not. Leaving a digital legacy – Studentsʼ work is preserved online and can be viewed or expanded in the future. Digital libraries: online sources of learning materials The National Science Digital Library program has produced curated collections of online teaching and learning materials built through contributions from the education and research communities (Mervis, 2009). Unfortunately, there is not one centralized database, but rather, materials are spread out across many different libraries, each having their own organization and focus. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grants No. 0937791 & 0737474. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. References and resources Borgman, C. (2008). Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The Cyberlearning Opportunity and Challenge. Report of the NSF Taskforce on Cyberlearning. NSF, Arlington, VA. Brewer, C. and Smith, D. (eds.)(2011). Vision and Change in Undergraduate Biology Education: A Call to Action. AAAS, Washington D.C. Glykos, N. (2011). The 11 th Misconception? CBE-Life Science Education. 10:1-2. Jonassen D.H. et al. (2003) Learning to Solve Problems with Technology: A Constructivist Perspective. 2 nd Ed. Merrill Prentice Hall. Columbus, OH. Mervis, J. (2009). NSF Rethinks Its Digital Library. Science, 323 (5910), 54-58. Example activity: using multiple animations to dissect transcription and translation The example assignment shown below takes advantage of the many different representations of the processes of transcription and translation that can be harvested from digital libraries. After viewing three different animations, students answer questions regarding how each video portrayed a certain aspect of the topic. They can examine the level of detail of each video and why certain features were portrayed as they were. By examining multiple sources, the students get different perspectives that can be combined to enhance their understanding of the subject. This practice gives the student more engagement with the material, rather than simply watching a single video, requires comparisons across representations, and allows the student to make decisions about the quality of each representation, as a teacher would when choosing an animation to show to the class. NSDL National Science Digital Library www.nsdl.org - The NSF-funded online library for education and research in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics. BEN BiosciEdNet www.biosciednet.org/portal - The NSDL pathway for biological sciences education housing over 12, 067 reviewed resources covering 77 biological sciences topics. OER Commons Open Educational Resources www.oercommons.org - With over 125 major content partners...access over 20,000 open educational resources...OER Commons currently has over 8,000 registered users and users from 193 countries. APS Archive American Physiological Society www.apsarchive.org - More than 2,200 peer-reviewed teaching resources including audiovisual materials, lesson plans, teaching journal articles, and scientific content materials. AMSER Applied Math and Science Education Repository amser.org - A portal of educational resources and services built specifically for use by those in Community and Technical Colleges. MicrobeLibrary www.microbelibrary.org - Over 2000 resources for teaching and learning microbiology from 7 collections. BioQUEST Curriculum Consortium Library bioquest.org - The BioQUEST collection contains Investigative Cases, Problem Spaces, simulations and datasets collaboratively developed by faculty. Action Bioscience Actionbioscience.org - A non-commercial, educational web site published by the American Institute of Biological Sciences created to promote bioscience literacy by focusing on issues with articles provided by scientists and science educators. Nature Scitable www.nature.com/scitable - A free science library and personal learning tool by Nature Publishing Group currently focusing on Genetics and Cell Biology. What are the challenges of teaching the central dogma? http://ocw.num.edu.mn/OcwWeb/Physics/ 8-592JSpring-2005/LectureNotes/detail/cendogma.html The central dogma of molecular biology is an essential topic for all Introduction to Biology courses. It is fundamental to understanding biology and is reiterated and built upon in nearly every advanced Biology course. It is often a difficult concept for students to grasp, particularly the way in which information flows from DNA to RNA to Protein (e.g., Glykos, 2011). The processes involved are also highly dynamic and require many different factors, making them difficult to visualize. DNAi – www.dnai.org - A part of the Dolan DNA Learning Center (www.dnalc.org) created by the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. This website provides a historical perspective for the molecular biology revolution, telling the story of DNA through the scientists and experiments that unraveled its mysteries. The site also includes animations and walkthroughs allowing students to decode the information contained in DNA, use lab techniques to manipulate genetic material, explore genomics, and see real world applications of DNA science. NCBI Bookshelf – www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books - Provides free access to over 700 texts in life science and healthcare. The website is designed to allow easy browsing, retrieval, and reading of science content. View each of the following anima3ons and answer the ques3ons. You may want to keep them open in separate browser windows so you can move back and forth between them. #1 #2 #3 #1 Clip from PBS produc3on DNA: The secret of life hHp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41_Ne5mS2ls&feature=related #2 PaHy Hain and Nathan Wambaugh: University of Nebraska hHp://www.class.unl.edu/biochem/gp2/m_biology/anima3on/gene/gene_a1.html #3 Learn Gene3cs: University of Utah hHp://learn.gene3cs.utah.edu/content/begin/dna/firefly/ 1. Based on your ini3al viewing, which of the anima3ons was the most interes3ng to you? Please briefly describe your choice. 2. The table below lists 3 key biological features that are important for gene expression. Rank the anima3ons on how clearly they represent the process. 3. Where in the eukaryo3c cell do the processes of transcrip3on and transla3on take place? Compare and contrast how the anima3ons represented this feature. 4. Describe a feature from one of the anima3ons that was very useful to you and one that was very confusing to you. Animation #1 Animation #2 Animation #3 3 key biological features Rank the animations for each feature. 1. The RNA Polymerase is recruited to a geneʼs regulatory elements (promoter). 2. Transcription and translation occur at different times and at different locations within the cell. 3. tRNA molecules bring amino acids to the mRNA in order for the ribosome to assemble the polypeptide chain. Aipotu – intro.bio.umb.edu/aipotu - Pronounced “ay poh too,” the name is “Utopia” reversed. This software, developed by Brian White at the University of Massachusetts-Boston, simulates the genetics, biochemistry, molecular biology, and evolution of organisms in a biologically reasonable and pedagogically relevant way.

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Cyberlearning at Community Collegeswww.c3cyberlearning.ning.com

Navigating the cyberlearning landscape: A case study involving teaching the central dogma of biology

Justin Pruneski Sam DonovanDepartment of Biological Sciences

Introduction

Cyberlearning—learning that is mediated by networked computing andcommunications technologies—is increasingly influencing undergraduate scienceeducation and is providing useful new models for engaging students (Borgman, 2008).Finding effective and innovative ways to harness the immense resources available onthe web and applying them to learning is a significant challenge facing educatorstoday. This project sets out to identify and characterize ways that college biologyfaculty can use digital resources to engage students in meaningful learning (Jonassenet al. 2003). We focus on a single core topic area, the central dogma of molecularbiology, highlighting example resources and strategies that can be applied to othertopics and courses. Our goal for the project is to raise faculty awareness about theavailability of diverse online resources and suggest innovative teaching approachesthat take advantage of the new information landscape. This poster contains a sampleof the materials that have been compiled, a pedagogical characterization of the typesof resources available, a discussion of search strategies for finding resources andsuggestions for their use in teaching undergraduate biology.

Examples of cyberlearning resources

How can cyberlearning facilitate meaningful learning?

Listed below are some practices that cyberlearning activities can mediate orencourage. They emphasize student-centered approaches where learning isactive, intentional, constructive, authentic, and cooperative (Jonassen et al. 2003).

Providing high-quality content – A variety of learning resources can be foundonline for any given topic.Student-directed learning – Students are actively involved in the obtaining andprocessing of information.Collaboration – Students work together to build more meaningful work than eachstudent could achieve on his/her own.Using scientific data – Students can view, manipulate, and interpret real scientificdata in order to test hypotheses and form conclusions.Modeling professional practices – Through activities such as case studies andsimulations, students practice skills useful in their future careers.Relevance – Cyberlearning activities often use real-world examples to put topicsinto the correct context.Access to multiple resources and perspectives – By comparing andcontrasting multiple resources, they can achieve more understanding than simplyanalyzing one resource (see example in top right panel).Interdisciplinary investigations – Cyberlearning skills can be used in any subjectand often blend many different disciplines.Adaptability – Many resources can be customized to meet the specific needs ofthe teacher or class.Making the learning process visible – Both teachers and students can monitorstudent work and reflect on what works and what does not.Leaving a digital legacy – Studentsʼ work is preserved online and can be viewedor expanded in the future.

Digital libraries: online sources of learning materialsThe National Science Digital Library program has produced curated collections ofonline teaching and learning materials built through contributions from theeducation and research communities (Mervis, 2009). Unfortunately, there is not onecentralized database, but rather, materials are spread out across many differentlibraries, each having their own organization and focus.

This material is based upon work supported by the NationalScience Foundation under Grants No. 0937791 & 0737474.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendationsexpressed in this material are those of the authors and do notnecessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

References and resourcesBorgman, C. (2008). Fostering Learning in the Networked World: The CyberlearningOpportunity and Challenge. Report of the NSF Taskforce on Cyberlearning. NSF,Arlington, VA.Brewer, C. and Smith, D. (eds.)(2011). Vision and Change in Undergraduate BiologyEducation: A Call to Action. AAAS, Washington D.C.Glykos, N. (2011). The 11th Misconception? CBE-Life Science Education. 10:1-2.Jonassen D.H. et al. (2003) Learning to Solve Problems with Technology: AConstructivist Perspective. 2nd Ed. Merrill Prentice Hall. Columbus, OH.Mervis, J. (2009). NSF Rethinks Its Digital Library. Science, 323 (5910), 54-58.

Example activity: using multiple animations todissect transcription and translation

The example assignment shown below takes advantage of the many differentrepresentations of the processes of transcription and translation that can be harvestedfrom digital libraries. After viewing three different animations, students answerquestions regarding how each video portrayed a certain aspect of the topic. They canexamine the level of detail of each video and why certain features were portrayed asthey were. By examining multiple sources, the students get different perspectives thatcan be combined to enhance their understanding of the subject. This practice givesthe student more engagement with the material, rather than simply watching a singlevideo, requires comparisons across representations, and allows the student to makedecisions about the quality of each representation, as a teacher would when choosingan animation to show to the class.

NSDLNational Science

Digital Library

 www.nsdl.org - The NSF-funded online library for education and research inScience, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.

BENBiosciEdNet

www.biosciednet.org/portal - The NSDL pathway for biological sciences educationhousing over 12, 067 reviewed resources covering 77 biological sciences topics.

OER CommonsOpen Educational

Resources

www.oercommons.org - With over 125 major content partners...access over 20,000open educational resources...OER Commons currently has over 8,000 registeredusers and users from 193 countries.

APS ArchiveAmerican

PhysiologicalSociety

www.apsarchive.org - More than 2,200 peer-reviewed teaching resources includingaudiovisual materials, lesson plans, teaching journal articles, and scientific contentmaterials.

AMSERApplied Math andScience Education

Repository

amser.org - A portal of educational resources and services built specifically for use bythose in Community and Technical Colleges.

MicrobeLibrary www.microbelibrary.org - Over 2000 resources for teaching and learning microbiologyfrom 7 collections.

BioQUESTCurriculum

Consortium Library

bioquest.org - The BioQUEST collection contains Investigative Cases, ProblemSpaces, simulations and datasets collaboratively developed by faculty.

Action Bioscience Actionbioscience.org - A non-commercial, educational web site published by theAmerican Institute of Biological Sciences created to promote bioscience literacy byfocusing on issues with articles provided by scientists and science educators.

Nature Scitable www.nature.com/scitable - A free science library and personal learning tool by NaturePublishing Group currently focusing on Genetics and Cell Biology.

What are the challenges of teaching the central dogma?

http://ocw.num.edu.mn/OcwWeb/Physics/8-592JSpring-2005/LectureNotes/detail/cendogma.html

The central dogma of molecular biology is anessential topic for all Introduction to Biology courses.It is fundamental to understanding biology and isreiterated and built upon in nearly every advancedBiology course. It is often a difficult concept forstudents to grasp, particularly the way in whichinformation flows from DNA to RNA to Protein (e.g.,Glykos, 2011). The processes involved are alsohighly dynamic and require many different factors,making them difficult to visualize.

DNAi – www.dnai.org - A part of the Dolan DNA Learning Center (www.dnalc.org)created by the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. This website provides a historicalperspective for the molecular biology revolution, telling the story of DNA through thescientists and experiments that unraveled its mysteries. The site also includesanimations and walkthroughs allowing students to decode the information contained inDNA, use lab techniques to manipulate genetic material, explore genomics, and seereal world applications of DNA science.

NCBI Bookshelf – www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books - Provides free access to over 700texts in life science and healthcare. The website is designed to allow easy browsing,retrieval, and reading of science content.

Vieweachofthefollowinganima3onsandanswertheques3ons.Youmaywanttokeepthemopeninseparatebrowserwindowssoyoucanmovebackandforthbetweenthem.#1 #2 #3

#1ClipfromPBSproduc3onDNA:ThesecretoflifehHp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41_Ne5mS2ls&feature=related#2PaHyHainandNathanWambaugh:UniversityofNebraskahHp://www.class.unl.edu/biochem/gp2/m_biology/anima3on/gene/gene_a1.html#3LearnGene3cs:UniversityofUtahhHp://learn.gene3cs.utah.edu/content/begin/dna/firefly/

1.Basedonyourini3alviewing,whichoftheanima3onswasthemostinteres3ngtoyou?Pleasebrieflydescribeyourchoice.

2.Thetablebelowlists3keybiologicalfeaturesthatareimportantforgeneexpression.Ranktheanima3onsonhowclearlytheyrepresenttheprocess.

3.Whereintheeukaryo3ccelldotheprocessesoftranscrip3onandtransla3ontakeplace?Compareandcontrasthowtheanima3onsrepresentedthisfeature.

4.Describeafeaturefromoneoftheanima3onsthatwasveryusefultoyouandonethatwasveryconfusingtoyou.

Animation#1

Animation#2

Animation#3

3 key biological features Rank the animations for each feature.1. The RNA Polymerase is recruited to ageneʼs regulatory elements (promoter).

2. Transcription and translation occur atdifferent times and at different locationswithin the cell.3. tRNA molecules bring amino acids to themRNA in order for the ribosome toassemble the polypeptide chain.

Aipotu – intro.bio.umb.edu/aipotu - Pronounced “ay poh too,” the name is “Utopia”reversed. This software, developed by Brian White at the University ofMassachusetts-Boston, simulates the genetics, biochemistry, molecular biology, andevolution of organisms in a biologically reasonable and pedagogically relevant way.