Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy

Many science educators agree that 21st century students need to develop mature scientific thinking skills. Unsurprisingly, students’ and experts’  erceptions about the nature of scientific knowledge differ. Moreover, students’ naïve and entrenched epistemologies can preclude their development towar...

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Main Authors: Sally Hoskins, Alan J. Gottesman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2018-05-01
Series:Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jmbesubmissions.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/article/view/1440
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spelling doaj-2da5f237bc234ae6ab7d9f5b8e77101f2020-11-25T01:42:21ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologyJournal of Microbiology & Biology Education1935-78771935-78852018-05-0119110.1128/jmbe.v19i1.1440717Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE StrategySally Hoskins0Alan J. Gottesman1City College of the City University of New YorkCity College of the City University of New York Many science educators agree that 21st century students need to develop mature scientific thinking skills. Unsurprisingly, students’ and experts’  erceptions about the nature of scientific knowledge differ. Moreover, students’ naïve and entrenched epistemologies can preclude their development toward “thinking like scientists.” Novel teaching approaches that guide students toward more mature perceptions may be needed to support their development of scientific thinking skills. To address such issues, physics educators developed the Colorado Learning Attitudes About Science Survey (CLASS), subsequently adapted for chemistry and biology. These surveys are “designed to compare novice and expert perceptions about the content and structure of a specific discipline; the source of knowledge about that discipline, including connection of the discipline to the real world; and problem-solving approaches” (Semsar et al., CBE Life Sci. Educ. 10:268–278; p 269). We used CLASS-Bio to track students’ perceptions of science in separate first-year and upperlevel CREATE (Consider, Read, Elucidate hypotheses, Analyze and interpret the data, Think of the next Experiment) electives, hypothesizing that perceptions would become significantly more expert-like across a semester. Both first-year and upper-level cohorts made significant expert-like shifts. Students also made significant critical thinking gains in CREATE courses. Our findings of more mature, expert-like perceptions of science post-course contrast with those of previous studies, where students’ thinking became significantly less expert-like across a term of introductory instruction and changed little in upper-level biology electives. Augmenting traditional biology curricula with CREATE courses could be an economical way to help undergraduates develop more mature views of science.   http://jmbesubmissions.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/article/view/1440CREATE strategyprimary literatureCLASS-Bioundergraduateexpert-like perceptionscritical thinking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sally Hoskins
Alan J. Gottesman
spellingShingle Sally Hoskins
Alan J. Gottesman
Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy
Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
CREATE strategy
primary literature
CLASS-Bio
undergraduate
expert-like perceptions
critical thinking
author_facet Sally Hoskins
Alan J. Gottesman
author_sort Sally Hoskins
title Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy
title_short Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy
title_full Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy
title_fullStr Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Undergraduates’ Perceptions of Science in Courses Taught Using the CREATE Strategy
title_sort investigating undergraduates’ perceptions of science in courses taught using the create strategy
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
issn 1935-7877
1935-7885
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Many science educators agree that 21st century students need to develop mature scientific thinking skills. Unsurprisingly, students’ and experts’  erceptions about the nature of scientific knowledge differ. Moreover, students’ naïve and entrenched epistemologies can preclude their development toward “thinking like scientists.” Novel teaching approaches that guide students toward more mature perceptions may be needed to support their development of scientific thinking skills. To address such issues, physics educators developed the Colorado Learning Attitudes About Science Survey (CLASS), subsequently adapted for chemistry and biology. These surveys are “designed to compare novice and expert perceptions about the content and structure of a specific discipline; the source of knowledge about that discipline, including connection of the discipline to the real world; and problem-solving approaches” (Semsar et al., CBE Life Sci. Educ. 10:268–278; p 269). We used CLASS-Bio to track students’ perceptions of science in separate first-year and upperlevel CREATE (Consider, Read, Elucidate hypotheses, Analyze and interpret the data, Think of the next Experiment) electives, hypothesizing that perceptions would become significantly more expert-like across a semester. Both first-year and upper-level cohorts made significant expert-like shifts. Students also made significant critical thinking gains in CREATE courses. Our findings of more mature, expert-like perceptions of science post-course contrast with those of previous studies, where students’ thinking became significantly less expert-like across a term of introductory instruction and changed little in upper-level biology electives. Augmenting traditional biology curricula with CREATE courses could be an economical way to help undergraduates develop more mature views of science.  
topic CREATE strategy
primary literature
CLASS-Bio
undergraduate
expert-like perceptions
critical thinking
url http://jmbesubmissions.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/article/view/1440
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