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Molecular CaseNet Biweekly meeting related (Oct 14, 2022)

Elizabeth and Keith shared their experiences writing molecular case studies. (Keith's slides attached)

Keith also shared the poster that his students prepared to share their MCS idea. A template pptx for you to create a similar poster to share is included too.

Shuchi introduced the idea of storytelling and its role in writing case studies

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Shuchismita Dutta onto Meeting Recordings

Awareness and prep for DEI work

Passion, Awareness, Skills, and Knowledge Inventory (PASK). This set of tools is very useful for teacher self reflection.

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Pat Marsteller onto Inclusive Teaching Inventories

Paper on first day information sheets

This paper has interesting suggestions for learning about your students.

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Pat Marsteller onto Inclusive Teaching Inventories

Students writing case studies

The MCS Standards is adapted from the spring discussions with MolCaseNet.

The writing assignment that I have used for the course (2 spring semesters) is shared.  

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Keith A. Johnson onto Communities of Practice

Student infographic assignment

I have used two infographics assignments in my course.  One early on focuses on polypeptide structures and chemical bonds (serves as a tool to remind students what we are looking at).  The second one is done for their group case study.  

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Keith A. Johnson onto Communities of Practice

Molecular CaseNet Biweekly meeting related (Sep 30, 2022)

Recordings and files from meeting

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Shuchismita Dutta onto Meeting Recordings

A Remote-Learning Framework for Student Research Projects: Using Datasets to Teach Experimental Design, Data Analysis and Science Communication

Remote learning often requires an alternative to hands-on, student-designed research projects. To this end, we created a package of scaffolded assignments to support introductory students through the research process using datasets from past student projects. These assignments provide opportunities for active practice and feedback on skills in experimental design, data analysis, literature review, and scientific communication. While we created the assignments to be heavily guided and focused on organismal biology to support students in our particular course context, the documents are highly customizable to meet the learning objectives for other course formats, subjects, and levels.

 

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Mary Elizabeth Allen onto Remote Lab Activities

Venom Diversity & Evolution in Reptiles and Amphibians - An education module for university students

This module contains information for a three part series introducing the venom system in reptiles and discussing it in an evolutionary context. In the first part venom and its ecological roles are defined with a discussion of the diversity of venom structures and venomous lineages, primarily in squamates. Examples are provided of the various ways that venoms may vary among biological scales. In parts 2 and 3, the evolution of venom is discussed. Part 2 focuses on a description of how the venom system arose in squamates and a discussion of the challenges associated with defining "venomousness". Part 3 examines the various genetic mechanisms that produce venom variation using examples from primarily literature that are presented in Part 1. In addition to lecture materials, we include a primary literature based activity and a group activity designed to encourage students to explore the diversity of venomous taxa in reptiles and amphibians.

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Moses J Michelsohn onto Modules

Welcoming the new Cohort (Sep 23, 2022)

Includes video recording, text shared in chat, and slides used for meeting

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Shuchismita Dutta onto Meeting Recordings

The Inside and Outside the Body

The Inside and Outside the Body activity helps students develop a conceptual understanding of anatomical barriers such as skin and mucus membranes that separate internal cells and fluids from the external environment. This short exercise prepares students for lessons in both anatomy and physiology and reflects recommendations from policy documents that suggest teaching core concepts. Understanding processes such as absorption, gradients and flow, and body defenses relies on the core concept of anatomical barriers. Instructors can use the concepts taught in this activity in subsequent discussions of topics such as immune tolerance of the fetus, the devastating impact of burns, and the sites of gas exchange.

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Angela Hartsock onto A&P

Introduction to communities of practice

Provides a brief overview of the concept and its uses

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Shuchismita Dutta onto Communities of Practice

Designing an Anti-Racist Syllabus

The Alliance for the Black Community (ABC) developed a workshop to help faculty at California State University East Bay redesign their syllabi to incorporate anti-racist pedagogical practices.

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Stephanie Zaleski onto Pedagogy

BIOME 2022 Daily Spark: Accessibility

Presentation on designing accessible STEM learning communities at the 2022 BIOME Institute.

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Pat Marsteller onto UDL

Meiosis: A Play in Three Acts, Starring DNA Sequence

Meiosis is well known for being a sticky topic that appears repeatedly in biology curricula. We observe that a typical undergraduate biology major cannot correctly identify haploid and diploid cells or explain how and why chromosomes pair before segregation. We published an interactive modeling lesson with socks to represent chromosomes and demonstrated that it could improve student understanding of ploidy (1). Here we present an improvement on that lesson, using DNA paper strips in place of socks to better demonstrate how and why crossing over facilitates proper segregation. During the lesson, student volunteers act out the roles of chromosomes while the whole class discusses key aspects of the steps. Strips of paper with DNA sequences are used to demonstrate the degrees of similarity between sister chromatids and homologous chromosomes and to prompt students to realize how and why homologous pairing must occur before cell division. We include an activity on Holliday Junctions that can be used during the main lesson, skipped, or taught as a stand-alone lesson.

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Rachel Skinner onto Anatomy1

How Do Kidneys Make Urine From Blood? Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Filtration, Secretion, Reabsorption, and Excretion

The function of the kidneys is to help maintain a constant internal environment (homeostasis) by regulating the volume and chemical composition of the blood. This regulation occurs via three fundamental processes: filtration, secretion, and reabsorption. Because these three processes all concern transfers between the blood and the pre-urine, inexperienced biology students frequently confuse them with each other and with the related process of excretion. Such confusion impairs understanding of the kidney’s regulatory functions. For instance, the effects of H+ secretion and HCO3- reabsorption on plasma pH can only be predicted if one knows that secretion entails removal from the blood while reabsorption entails addition to the blood. The enclosed three-part lesson teaches these processes through the use of multiple related examples with clinical relevance. In Module A (“Simple Math”), students define the direction of transfer (blood to pre-urine or pre-urine to blood) for each process, create a simple equation to show how excretion rate depends on these three processes, and solve the equation for missing values. In Module B (“Simple Graphs”), students show qualitatively how the three processes affect the composition of the pre-urine and (by implication) the blood. In Module C (“GFR”), students examine the relationship between glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and plasma levels of solutes like creatinine. By presenting multiple related examples embedded in the framework of Test Question Templates (TQTs), this lesson promotes a solid understanding of filtration, secretion, reabsorption, and excretion that can be applied to any naturally occurring substance or drug.

Primary image: Four urinary system processes. This image visually summarizes the four processes covered in this lesson: filtration, secretion, reabsorption, and excretion.

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Rachel Skinner onto Anatomy2

UDL Mapping Activity

This activity guides faculty through analyzing a resource using the Universal Design for Learning Guidelines.

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Katie M. Sandlin onto UDL

Introduction to the Universal Design for Learning Guidelines

Two activities for introducing Universal Design for Learning to a faculty audience

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Katie M. Sandlin onto UDL

Inclusive teaching strategies

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Pat Marsteller onto Inclusive Teaching Inventories

Working within a QUBES group

Basics

Interacting and sharing within a group

Sharing your group's work with the QUBES community

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Suann Yang onto Using QUBES

Resources for Learning About the UDL Framework

This document is a short overview of Universal Design for Learning (UDL) – what it is and how it works – along with useful resources.

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Suann Yang onto Universal Design for Learning