Count me in: Increasing early detection of invasive species with community science
Author(s): Suann Yang1, Jennifer Dean2
1. SUNY Geneseo 2. New York Natural Heritage Program (SUNY Environmental Science and Forestry)
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Description
This lesson was designed for the first 60 minutes of an in-person laboratory class meeting. Target student level is introductory biology for mixed majors/non-majors. The materials here include an instructor guide (1_LessonGuide_CountMeIn), an in-class presentation (Google slides; 2_PresentationSlides_CountMeIn), a homework assignment (3_Homework_CountMeIn), and a link to the interview with Dr. Jennifer Dean, (BioGraphI Interview with Dr. Jennifer Dean)
Content learning objective
- Describe the importance of public participation in science (citizen-science, community science) for the detection of non-indigenous, invasive species.
Quantitative learning objectives
- Interpret graphs and/or data figures related to the concepts from this lesson
- Reflect on your perceptions about using graphs or figures in biology.
Diversity/equity/inclusion learning objectives
- Reflect on your perceptions of people who do biology.
- Compare your own interests and/or identities to those of people who do biology.
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
- Yang, S., Dean, J. (2023). Count me in: Increasing early detection of invasive species with community science. Biologists and Graph Interpretation, QUBES Educational Resources. doi:10.25334/DVND-2466