Implementation of an Online Poster Symposium for a Large-Enrollment, Natural Science, General Education, Asynchronous Course

被引:1
|
作者
Weaver, Ella M. [1 ]
Shaul, Kylienne A. [1 ]
Lower, Brian H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Ohio State Univ, Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Columbus, OH 43210 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
online; general education; scientific posters; asynchronous; natural science; STEM-science technology engineering mathematics; large enrollment; virtual poster session; DESIGN; COMMUNICATION; PERFORMANCE; SESSIONS;
D O I
10.3389/feduc.2022.906995
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Asynchronous online courses are popular because they offer benefits to both students and instructors. Students benefit from the convenience, flexibility, affordability, freedom of geography, and access to information. Instructors and institutions benefit by having a broad geographical reach, scalability, and cost-savings of no physical classroom. A challenge with asynchronous online courses is providing students with engaging, collaborative and interactive experiences. Here, we describe how an online poster symposium can be used as a unique educational experience and assessment tool in a large-enrollment (e.g., 500 students), asynchronous, natural science, general education (GE) course. The course, Introduction to Environmental Science (ENR2100), was delivered using distance education (DE) technology over a 15-week semester. In ENR2100 students learn a variety of topics including freshwater resources, surface water, aquifers, groundwater hydrology, ecohydrology, coastal and ocean circulation, drinking water, water purification, wastewater treatment, irrigation, urban and agricultural runoff, sediment and contaminant transport, water cycle, water policy, water pollution, and water quality. Here we present a is a long-term study that takes place from 2017 to 2022 (before and after COVID-19) and involved 5,625 students over 8 semesters. Scaffolding was used to break up the poster project into smaller, more manageable assignments, which students completed throughout the semester. Instructions, examples, how-to videos, book chapters and rubrics were used to accommodate Students' different levels of knowledge. Poster assignments were designed to teach students how to find and critically evaluate sources of information, recognize the changing nature of scientific knowledge, methods, models and tools, understand the application of scientific data and technological developments, and evaluate the social and ethical implications of natural science discoveries. At the end of the semester students participated in an asynchronous online poster symposium. Each student delivered a 5-min poster presentation using an online learning management system and completed peer reviews of their classmates' posters using a rubric. This poster project met the learning objectives of our natural science, general education course and taught students important written, visual and verbal communication skills. Students were surveyed to determine, which parts of the course were most effective for instruction and learning. Students ranked poster assignments first, followed closely by lectures videos. Approximately 87% of students were confident that they could produce a scientific poster in the future and 80% of students recommended virtual poster symposiums for online courses.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 23 条
  • [1] The Impact of Large-Enrollment Online College Science Courses on Student Anxiety
    Mohammed, T. F.
    Cooper, K. M.
    Nadile, E. M.
    Busch, C. A.
    Brownell, S. E.
    [J]. INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2023, 62 : S217 - S217
  • [2] Adaptation and assessment of a gradual release of responsibility model for a large-enrollment general chemistry course
    Lapeyrouse, Nicole
    Yestrebsky, Cherie
    [J]. ACS Symposium Series, 2019, 1330 : 137 - 146
  • [3] Aspects of Large-Enrollment Online College Science Courses That Exacerbate and Alleviate Student Anxiety
    Mohammed, Tasneem F.
    Nadile, Erika M.
    Busch, Carly A.
    Brister, Danielle
    Brownell, Sara E.
    Claiborne, Chade T.
    Edwards, Baylee A.
    Wolf, Joseph Gazing
    Lunt, Curtis
    Tran, Missy
    Vargas, Cindy
    Walker, Kobe M.
    Warkina, Tamiru D.
    Witt, Madison L.
    Zheng, Yi
    Cooper, Katelyn M.
    [J]. CBE-LIFE SCIENCES EDUCATION, 2021, 20 (04):
  • [4] Implementing An Active Learning, Large-Enrollment Online Physiology Course During The COVID-19 Pandemic
    Collins, William, III
    Watson, Robert
    Vasudevan, Erin
    [J]. FASEB JOURNAL, 2021, 35
  • [5] TRANSFORMING A LARGE-ENROLLMENT, ENGINEERING STATICS COURSE INTO QUALITY ONLINE INSTRUCTION BY ADAPTING PROVEN INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES
    On, Pil-Won
    Salim, Hani A.
    [J]. 2012 ASEE ANNUAL CONFERENCE, 2012,
  • [6] Short-Term and Long-Term Effects of POGIL in a Large-Enrollment General Chemistry Course
    Vincent-Ruz, Paulette
    Meyer, Tara
    Roe, Sean G.
    Schunn, Christian D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION, 2020, 97 (05) : 1228 - 1238
  • [7] Assessing student engagement with teamwork in an online, large-enrollment course-based undergraduate research experience in physics
    Werth, Alexandra
    Oliver, Kristin
    West, Colin G.
    Lewandowski, H. J.
    [J]. PHYSICAL REVIEW PHYSICS EDUCATION RESEARCH, 2022, 18 (02):
  • [8] Engaging students through online video homework assignments: A case study in a large-enrollment ecology and evolution course
    Gerhart, Laci M.
    Anderton, Brittany N.
    [J]. ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 11 (11): : 5777 - 5789
  • [9] Asynchronous student-generated flip videos facilitate student learning and assessment in a large-enrollment introductory human physiology course
    Guffey, Haley E.
    Mrocko, Anthony L.
    Smith, Brianna K.
    Spranger, Marty D.
    [J]. ADVANCES IN PHYSIOLOGY EDUCATION, 2023, 47 (04) : 776 - 787
  • [10] Data Science for Biochemists: Integrating and Evaluating the Use of Interactive Digital Python']Python Notebooks in a Large-Enrollment Undergraduate Biochemistry Course
    Brunk, Rebecca
    Shukla, Kriti
    Hutson, Bryant L.
    Wang, Yue
    Verber, Matthew
    Ford, Christina
    Dennis, William
    Mehta, Aarav
    Hogan, Brian P.
    Swetnam, Tyson
    Brunk, Elizabeth
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION, 2024, 101 (09) : 3643 - 3655