1. Facilitating Growth through Frustration: Using Genomics Research in a Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience
- Author
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John M. Braverman, Kenneth Saville, Mollie K. Manier, Katherine C. Teeter, Sarah C. R. Elgin, Rachel Sterne-Marr, Debaditya Mukhopadhyay, Adam Haberman, M. Logan Johnson, Jacob D. Kagey, Emily Furbee, Matthew A. Escobar, Vida Mingo, Stephanie Schroeder, Srebrenka Robic, Anya Goodman, Catherine Reinke, Yuying Gosser, Meg M. Laakso, Mary A. Smith, Daron C. Barnard, Christopher Bazinet, Nathan T. Mortimer, Mary L. Preuss, Cindy Arrigo, Paul J. Overvoorde, Elizabeth Mitchell, Rebecca C. Burgess, Wilson Leung, Diane Sklensky, Laura K. Reed, Lindsey J. Long, Don W. Paetkau, Melissa Kleinschmit, Judith Leatherman, Olga R. Kopp, Janie Brennan, Joyce Stamm, Chunguang Du, Norma A. Velázquez-Ulloa, Thomas C. Giarla, Gerard P. McNeil, Justin Thackeray, Andrew M. Arsham, Jeremy Buhler, Jennifer A. Kennell, Sara J. Anderson, Leming Zhou, Takrima Sadikot, Alexis Nagengast, Susan Parrish, Heather L. Eisler, Dennis Revie, Leocadia V. Paliulis, Chiyedza Small, Anna K. Allen, Amy T. Hark, James E. J. Bedard, Lisa Kadlec, Jeffery S. Thompson, Paula Croonquist, James V. Price, Stephanie Toering Peters, Evan C. Merkhofer, Melanie Van Stry, Matthew Skerritt, Anne G. Rosenwald, Cindy Wolfe, Nicholas Pullen, Nighat P. Kokan, Sondra Dubowsky, Jamie Siders Sanford, Rebecca Spokony, Luis F. Matos, Christopher D. Shaffer, Consuelo J. Alvarez, Justin R. DiAngelo, Jennifer Roecklein-Canfield, Maria Soledad Santisteban, Sheryl T. Smith, Juan Carlos Martínez-Cruzado, Indrani Bose, Christopher J. Jones, Adam Kleinschmit, Brian Yowler, Karim A. Sharif, S. Catherine Silver Key, Amie J. McClellan, Matthew Wawersik, Jennifer C. Jemc, Carina E. Howell, Hemlata Mistry, Rivka L. Glaser, Shan Hays, Kimberly L. Keller, Michael R. Rubin, Martin G. Burg, David Lopatto, Charles R. Hauser, James J. Youngblom, Jennifer Leigh Myka, Michael S. Foulk, and Aparna Sreenivasan
- Subjects
QH301-705.5 ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Frustration ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Education ,Formative assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mathematics education ,Biology (General) ,Set (psychology) ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,030304 developmental biology ,media_common ,lcsh:LC8-6691 ,0303 health sciences ,LC8-6691 ,lcsh:Special aspects of education ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Research ,4. Education ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Special aspects of education ,Focus group ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Undergraduate research ,General partnership ,Working through ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Psychology ,0503 education - Abstract
A hallmark of the research experience is encountering experimental difficulty and working through that challenge to reach success. The ability to overcome scientific challenges is essential to being a successful scientist, but replicating these challenges can be difficult in a teaching setting. The Genomics Education Partnership (GEP) is a consortium of faculty who engage their students in a genomics Course-based Undergraduate Research Experience (CURE). Students participate in genome annotation, generating gene models using multiple lines of experimental evidence. Our observations suggested that the students’ learning experience in this research is continuous and recursive, frequently beginning with frustration but eventually leading to success. In order to explore our “formative frustration” hypothesis, we gathered data about this research experience from faculty via a survey, and from students both via a general survey and a small set of focus groups administered at the end of the GEP CURE. All three datasets contained comments mentioning frustration and struggle, as well as learning and better understanding of the scientific process. Bioinformatics projects are particularly well suited to the process of iteration and refinement because iterations can be performed quickly and are inexpensive in both time and money. Based on these findings, we suggest that a dynamic of what we have deemed “formative frustration” is an important aspect for a successful CURE.
- Published
- 2020