The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014

Fieldwork is a component of many college science courses. Faculty at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga have facilitated fieldwork-intensive science courses in The Bahamas for many years. The study surveyed students who participated in fieldwork in The Ba...

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Main Authors: Dawn M. Ford, W. Hardy Eshbaugh, R. Christopher Branson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Bahamas 2017-10-01
Series:International Journal of Bahamian Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/286
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spelling doaj-8d1b70711c274daf89677fcb25bb7ece2021-05-27T20:11:13ZengUniversity of the BahamasInternational Journal of Bahamian Studies2220-57722017-10-01230153010.15362/ijbs.v23i0.286243The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014Dawn M. Ford0W. Hardy Eshbaugh1R. Christopher Branson2University of Tennessee at ChattanoogaMiami UniversityUniversity of California, Los AngelesFieldwork is a component of many college science courses. Faculty at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga have facilitated fieldwork-intensive science courses in The Bahamas for many years. The study surveyed students who participated in fieldwork in The Bahamas between 1977 and 2014, measuring the perceived impact the courses had on their personal and professional development, as well as their international perspective. Survey participants agreed the experience had a high impact on their personal development (97), professional development (91%), and international perspective (89%). General Linear Model results indicated no statistically significant differences between or within groups, suggesting participants' perceived impacts are the same regardless of gender, age, institution or field station location. Qualitative data analysis revealed several types of impact, such as understanding of and appreciation for Bahamian culture, appreciation or tropical environments, development of research skills, and enhanced career opportunities. International fieldwork in The Bahamas clearly has positive long-term impacts on students and should be continued.https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/286biology - study and teaching - fieldworkmarine biology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dawn M. Ford
W. Hardy Eshbaugh
R. Christopher Branson
spellingShingle Dawn M. Ford
W. Hardy Eshbaugh
R. Christopher Branson
The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014
International Journal of Bahamian Studies
biology - study and teaching - fieldwork
marine biology
author_facet Dawn M. Ford
W. Hardy Eshbaugh
R. Christopher Branson
author_sort Dawn M. Ford
title The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014
title_short The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014
title_full The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014
title_fullStr The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Science Field Courses in the Bahamas on the Personal and Professional Development of U.S. College Students, 1977-2014
title_sort impact of science field courses in the bahamas on the personal and professional development of u.s. college students, 1977-2014
publisher University of the Bahamas
series International Journal of Bahamian Studies
issn 2220-5772
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Fieldwork is a component of many college science courses. Faculty at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga have facilitated fieldwork-intensive science courses in The Bahamas for many years. The study surveyed students who participated in fieldwork in The Bahamas between 1977 and 2014, measuring the perceived impact the courses had on their personal and professional development, as well as their international perspective. Survey participants agreed the experience had a high impact on their personal development (97), professional development (91%), and international perspective (89%). General Linear Model results indicated no statistically significant differences between or within groups, suggesting participants' perceived impacts are the same regardless of gender, age, institution or field station location. Qualitative data analysis revealed several types of impact, such as understanding of and appreciation for Bahamian culture, appreciation or tropical environments, development of research skills, and enhanced career opportunities. International fieldwork in The Bahamas clearly has positive long-term impacts on students and should be continued.
topic biology - study and teaching - fieldwork
marine biology
url https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/286
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