Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory

If we are to teach effectively, tools are needed to measure student learning. A widely used method for quickly measuring student understanding of core concepts in a discipline is the concept inventory (CI). Using the American Society for Microbiology Curriculum Guidelines (ASMCG) for microbiology,...

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Main Authors: Timothy D. Paustian, Amy G Briggs, Robert E. Brennan, Nancy Boury, John Buchner, Shannon Harris, Rachel E. A. Horak, Lee E. Hughes, D. Sue Katz-Amburn, Maria J. Massimelli, Ann H McDonald, Todd P Primm, Ann C Smith, Ann M Stevens, Sunny B Yung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jmbesubmissions.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/article/view/1320
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spelling doaj-fc5dce3d702843b4950aa224eeeb030e2020-11-25T01:25:34ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologyJournal of Microbiology & Biology Education1935-78771935-78852017-12-0118310.1128/jmbe.v18i3.1320672Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept InventoryTimothy D. Paustian0Amy G Briggs1Robert E. Brennan2Nancy Boury3John Buchner4Shannon Harris5Rachel E. A. Horak6Lee E. Hughes7D. Sue Katz-Amburn8Maria J. Massimelli9Ann H McDonald10Todd P Primm11Ann C Smith12Ann M Stevens13Sunny B YungUniv. of Wisconsin-MadisonBeloit CollegeUniv. of Central OklahomaIowa State UniversityUniv. of MarylandUniv. of Wisconsin-MadisonAmerican Society MicrobiologyUniv. of North TexasRogers State Univ.Univ. of California - IrvineConcordia Univ. WisconsinSam Houston State Univ.Univ. of MarylandVirginia Tech If we are to teach effectively, tools are needed to measure student learning. A widely used method for quickly measuring student understanding of core concepts in a discipline is the concept inventory (CI). Using the American Society for Microbiology Curriculum Guidelines (ASMCG) for microbiology, faculty from 11 academic institutions created and validated a new microbiology concept inventory (MCI). The MCI was developed in three phases. In phase one, learning outcomes and fundamental statements from the ASMCG were used to create T/F questions coupled with open responses. In phase two, the 743 responses to MCI 1.0 were examined to find the most common misconceptions, which were used to create distractors for multiple-choice questions. MCI 2.0 was then administered to 1,043 students. The responses of these students were used to create MCI 3.0, a 23-question CI that measures students’ understanding of all 27 fundamental statements. MCI 3.0 was found to be reliable, with a Cronbach’s alpha score of 0.705 and Ferguson’s delta of 0.97. Test item analysis demonstrated good validity and discriminatory power as judged by item difficulty, item discrimination, and point-biserial correlation coefficient. Comparison of pre- and posttest scores showed that microbiology students at 10 institutions showed an increase in understanding of concepts after instruction, except for questions probing metabolism (average normalized learning gain was 0.15). The MCI will enable quantitative analysis of student learning gains in understanding microbiology, help to identify misconceptions, and point toward areas where efforts should be made to develop teaching approaches to overcome them. http://jmbesubmissions.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/article/view/1320concept inventoryassessment toollearning gainsmicrobiology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Timothy D. Paustian
Amy G Briggs
Robert E. Brennan
Nancy Boury
John Buchner
Shannon Harris
Rachel E. A. Horak
Lee E. Hughes
D. Sue Katz-Amburn
Maria J. Massimelli
Ann H McDonald
Todd P Primm
Ann C Smith
Ann M Stevens
Sunny B Yung
spellingShingle Timothy D. Paustian
Amy G Briggs
Robert E. Brennan
Nancy Boury
John Buchner
Shannon Harris
Rachel E. A. Horak
Lee E. Hughes
D. Sue Katz-Amburn
Maria J. Massimelli
Ann H McDonald
Todd P Primm
Ann C Smith
Ann M Stevens
Sunny B Yung
Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory
Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
concept inventory
assessment tool
learning gains
microbiology
author_facet Timothy D. Paustian
Amy G Briggs
Robert E. Brennan
Nancy Boury
John Buchner
Shannon Harris
Rachel E. A. Horak
Lee E. Hughes
D. Sue Katz-Amburn
Maria J. Massimelli
Ann H McDonald
Todd P Primm
Ann C Smith
Ann M Stevens
Sunny B Yung
author_sort Timothy D. Paustian
title Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory
title_short Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory
title_full Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory
title_fullStr Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory
title_full_unstemmed Development, Validation, and Application of the Microbiology Concept Inventory
title_sort development, validation, and application of the microbiology concept inventory
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
issn 1935-7877
1935-7885
publishDate 2017-12-01
description If we are to teach effectively, tools are needed to measure student learning. A widely used method for quickly measuring student understanding of core concepts in a discipline is the concept inventory (CI). Using the American Society for Microbiology Curriculum Guidelines (ASMCG) for microbiology, faculty from 11 academic institutions created and validated a new microbiology concept inventory (MCI). The MCI was developed in three phases. In phase one, learning outcomes and fundamental statements from the ASMCG were used to create T/F questions coupled with open responses. In phase two, the 743 responses to MCI 1.0 were examined to find the most common misconceptions, which were used to create distractors for multiple-choice questions. MCI 2.0 was then administered to 1,043 students. The responses of these students were used to create MCI 3.0, a 23-question CI that measures students’ understanding of all 27 fundamental statements. MCI 3.0 was found to be reliable, with a Cronbach’s alpha score of 0.705 and Ferguson’s delta of 0.97. Test item analysis demonstrated good validity and discriminatory power as judged by item difficulty, item discrimination, and point-biserial correlation coefficient. Comparison of pre- and posttest scores showed that microbiology students at 10 institutions showed an increase in understanding of concepts after instruction, except for questions probing metabolism (average normalized learning gain was 0.15). The MCI will enable quantitative analysis of student learning gains in understanding microbiology, help to identify misconceptions, and point toward areas where efforts should be made to develop teaching approaches to overcome them.
topic concept inventory
assessment tool
learning gains
microbiology
url http://jmbesubmissions.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/article/view/1320
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