Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College

abstract: Health science students like students in many disciplines exhibit difficulty with transferring content from one course to another. For example, the problem explored in this study occurred when overlapping concepts were presented in introductory biology and chemistry courses, but students...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Steele, Bronwen (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8874
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-88742018-06-22T03:01:24Z Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College abstract: Health science students like students in many disciplines exhibit difficulty with transferring content from one course to another. For example, the problem explored in this study occurred when overlapping concepts were presented in introductory biology and chemistry courses, but students could not transfer the concepts to the other disciplinary course. In this mixed method action research study, the author served as facilitator/leader of a group of colleagues tasked with investigating and taking steps to resolve this student learning transfer problem. This study outlines the details of how an interdisciplinary community of practice (CoP) formed between chemistry and biology faculty members at a community college to address the problem and the benefits resulting from the CoP. Quantitative and qualitative data were obtained from transcripts of meetings of the faculty members, notes from other formal and informal meetings, classroom visits, a questionnaire containing Likert and open-ended items and interviews. Transcripts, notes, and interviews were coded to determine common themes. Findings suggested the CoP was an effective means to deal with the matter of student transfer of content across courses. In particular, the CoP agreed to use similar terminology, created materials to be used consistently across the courses, and explored other transfer specific approaches that allowed for transfer of course content. Finally, the benefits of the CoP were due in large part to the collaboration that took place among participants. Dissertation/Thesis Steele, Bronwen (Author) Buss, Ray (Advisor) Zambo, Ron (Advisor) Rivera, Rey (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Science Education Adult Education collaboration community college community of practice cross-disciplinary instruction eng 99 pages Ed.D. Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8874 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Science Education
Adult Education
collaboration
community college
community of practice
cross-disciplinary
instruction
spellingShingle Science Education
Adult Education
collaboration
community college
community of practice
cross-disciplinary
instruction
Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College
description abstract: Health science students like students in many disciplines exhibit difficulty with transferring content from one course to another. For example, the problem explored in this study occurred when overlapping concepts were presented in introductory biology and chemistry courses, but students could not transfer the concepts to the other disciplinary course. In this mixed method action research study, the author served as facilitator/leader of a group of colleagues tasked with investigating and taking steps to resolve this student learning transfer problem. This study outlines the details of how an interdisciplinary community of practice (CoP) formed between chemistry and biology faculty members at a community college to address the problem and the benefits resulting from the CoP. Quantitative and qualitative data were obtained from transcripts of meetings of the faculty members, notes from other formal and informal meetings, classroom visits, a questionnaire containing Likert and open-ended items and interviews. Transcripts, notes, and interviews were coded to determine common themes. Findings suggested the CoP was an effective means to deal with the matter of student transfer of content across courses. In particular, the CoP agreed to use similar terminology, created materials to be used consistently across the courses, and explored other transfer specific approaches that allowed for transfer of course content. Finally, the benefits of the CoP were due in large part to the collaboration that took place among participants. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ed.D. Educational Leadership and Policy Studies 2011
author2 Steele, Bronwen (Author)
author_facet Steele, Bronwen (Author)
title Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College
title_short Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College
title_full Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College
title_fullStr Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College
title_full_unstemmed Cross-disciplinary Collaboration Between Two Science Disciplines at a Community College
title_sort cross-disciplinary collaboration between two science disciplines at a community college
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8874
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