Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.

In many areas of science, the ability to use computers to process, analyze, and visualize large data sets has become essential. The mismatch between the ability to generate large data sets and the computing skill to analyze them is arguably the most striking within the life sciences. The Digital Ima...

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Main Authors: Tessa Durham Brooks, Raychelle Burks, Erin Doyle, Mark Meysenburg, Tim Frey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241946
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spelling doaj-1c312790a48d43db88c1a796825fc8ee2021-05-21T04:30:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01165e024194610.1371/journal.pone.0241946Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.Tessa Durham BrooksRaychelle BurksErin DoyleMark MeysenburgTim FreyIn many areas of science, the ability to use computers to process, analyze, and visualize large data sets has become essential. The mismatch between the ability to generate large data sets and the computing skill to analyze them is arguably the most striking within the life sciences. The Digital Image and Vision Applications in Science (DIVAS) project describes a scaffolded series of interventions implemented over the span of a year to build the coding and computing skill of undergraduate students majoring primarily in the natural sciences. The program is designed as a community of practice, providing support within a network of learners. The program focus, images as data, provides a compelling 'hook' for participating scholars. Scholars begin the program with a one-credit spring semester seminar where they are exposed to image analysis. The program continues in the summer with a one-week, intensive Python and image processing workshop. From there, scholars tackle image analysis problems using a pair programming approach and can finish the summer with independent research. Finally, scholars participate in a follow-up seminar the subsequent spring and help onramp the next cohort of incoming scholars. We observed promising growth in participant self-efficacy in computing that was maintained throughout the project as well as significant growth in key computational skills. DIVAS program funding was able to support seventeen DIVAS over three years, with 76% of DIVAS scholars identifying as women and 14% of scholars identifying as members of an underrepresented minority group. Most scholars (82%) entered the program as first year students, with 94% of DIVAS scholars retained for the duration of the program and 100% of scholars remaining a STEM major one year after completing the program. The outcomes of the DIVAS project support the efficacy of building computational skill through repeated exposure of scholars to relevant applications over an extended period within a community of practice.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241946
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tessa Durham Brooks
Raychelle Burks
Erin Doyle
Mark Meysenburg
Tim Frey
spellingShingle Tessa Durham Brooks
Raychelle Burks
Erin Doyle
Mark Meysenburg
Tim Frey
Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tessa Durham Brooks
Raychelle Burks
Erin Doyle
Mark Meysenburg
Tim Frey
author_sort Tessa Durham Brooks
title Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
title_short Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
title_full Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
title_fullStr Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
title_full_unstemmed Digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
title_sort digital imaging and vision analysis in science project improves the self-efficacy and skill of undergraduate students in computational work.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In many areas of science, the ability to use computers to process, analyze, and visualize large data sets has become essential. The mismatch between the ability to generate large data sets and the computing skill to analyze them is arguably the most striking within the life sciences. The Digital Image and Vision Applications in Science (DIVAS) project describes a scaffolded series of interventions implemented over the span of a year to build the coding and computing skill of undergraduate students majoring primarily in the natural sciences. The program is designed as a community of practice, providing support within a network of learners. The program focus, images as data, provides a compelling 'hook' for participating scholars. Scholars begin the program with a one-credit spring semester seminar where they are exposed to image analysis. The program continues in the summer with a one-week, intensive Python and image processing workshop. From there, scholars tackle image analysis problems using a pair programming approach and can finish the summer with independent research. Finally, scholars participate in a follow-up seminar the subsequent spring and help onramp the next cohort of incoming scholars. We observed promising growth in participant self-efficacy in computing that was maintained throughout the project as well as significant growth in key computational skills. DIVAS program funding was able to support seventeen DIVAS over three years, with 76% of DIVAS scholars identifying as women and 14% of scholars identifying as members of an underrepresented minority group. Most scholars (82%) entered the program as first year students, with 94% of DIVAS scholars retained for the duration of the program and 100% of scholars remaining a STEM major one year after completing the program. The outcomes of the DIVAS project support the efficacy of building computational skill through repeated exposure of scholars to relevant applications over an extended period within a community of practice.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241946
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