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Teaching Practice, Student Experience

A biology instructor rethought her students’ role—and her own

January 16, 2020
Biology lecturer Megan Barker organized a poster event, complete with guest judges, so that her students could share the results of their in-class research projects with each other and the 51社区黑料community.
By Jackie Amsden

In Megan Barker鈥檚 Fall 2019 BPK 408W course on cell physiology, students worked together on lab-based research projects to investigate questions they themselves defined.

It was a powerful combination of teamwork and agency that led to deeper understanding and the acquisition of essential skills.

It was also a carefully considered approach resulting from Barker鈥檚 reflection on how instructors can best promote student learning.

鈥淲e throw a lot of content at students in universities, but until they have the opportunity to integrate and apply it, they really don鈥檛 own any of it 鈥 I mean, what am I doing here if I can be replaced by a YouTube video?鈥

Teamwork through coffee

For Barker (lecturer, biological sciences) and course co-authors Damon Poburko (assistant professor, biomedical physiology and kinesiology (BPK)) and Nadine Wicks (lecturer, BPK), one of the important parts of teaching students how to turn knowledge into action is helping them learn how to work in a team.

鈥淭here are no longer any single-author papers. Science is about communities of people troubleshooting experiments and talking through the data. Students need to know how to contribute to a group process and support others to contribute.鈥

After dividing the class into groups of two or three, Barker fostered her students鈥 team management skills by providing them with 鈥渟tructured prompts鈥 throughout the course.

鈥淥ne of their first assignments was to go for coffee with their partner and talk about what is working great in their relationship and what they can do better to improve it. To me, it鈥檚 important to signal to them that group process is integral to their progress and that it takes work.鈥

Barker also cut out course content to allow for in-class project time, so that students wouldn鈥檛 feel overburdened by the additional time that collaborating with others can require.

Giving students the power

Ensuring that teams had the freedom to direct and own their own projects was also essential, notes Barker.

鈥淚 provided feedback to the groups at various stages in the process, but I had to be really careful that I stayed in a consultant role and not in a management one. As soon as I take over their experiment, I take their agency away, and then the team loses its purpose. For me, it鈥檚 more important that they are in control of the process than that they get perfect-quality data.鈥

Nasim Abrisham, one of Barker鈥檚 recent students, says the opportunity to take charge was exciting.

鈥淚nstead of having an instructor feeding us articles, we got to learn through a real-life setting that involved lots of hands-on learning鈥攊t was really fun.鈥

Adjustments to maintain instructor sanity

In addition to cutting back on content and allowing students the freedom to make decisions, Barker notes that one of the biggest shifts she made to accommodate the self-directed nature of the assignment was to build in lots of peer-to-peer feedback.

鈥淚n a lot of ways, this course is like running 48 directed studies all at once, which could make you go insane if you try to take on all the support yourself. Instead, my approach is to leverage the knowledge in the room by getting students to give each other project feedback.鈥

鈥淢EGAN LET US HOLD THE REINS OF OUR PROJECTS, BUT WAS THERE TO GUIDE US, SO THAT WE STILL FELT SUPPORTED. I鈥橫 IN MY FOURTH YEAR, AND THIS WAS ONE OF MY TOP THREE COURSES OF ALL TIME.鈥 鈥 Irene Choi

Even so, Barker notes that she, her TA and a lab instructor spent a lot of time in the lab providing hands-on support during the two-week period allotted to the experimental portion of the students鈥 projects. 

鈥淚t is much more work for me running the course this way, but I wouldn鈥檛 do it if it wasn鈥檛 worth it.鈥   

Irene Choi, a student in Barker's BPK 408W class, presented the findings from her group's in-class research project at a poster session held at the end of the semester.