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Fostering and Sustaining Interdisciplinary Faculty Communities Around Undergraduate Teaching: Insights from the QUBES Project
Author(s): Sam S Donovan
University of Pittsburgh
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- SIAM.minisymposium.2018.Donovan.pdf(PDF | 4 MB)
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Description
The Quantitative Undergraduate Biology Education and Synthesis (QUBES) project acts as an online center supporting a diverse community of faculty and projects interested in improving students’ quantitative reasoning in biological contexts. We provide an online platform for scientific collaboration and computation that is being used by over 70 partner projects representing the life sciences, mathematics, earth science, statistics, computer science, and education research communities. To help our partners share their products and resources we have implemented a system for providing professional development to distributed, heterogeneous groups of teachers called Faculty Mentoring Networks (FMNs). Working across disciplinary boundaries to support communication, planning, delivery, and evaluation of FMNs has required explicit discussions of the differences among academic traditions, particularly as they influence uptake by other disciplines and use in teaching settings. This presentation will focus on several case studies of interdisciplinary collaboration facilitated by the QUBES project and highlight a set of practical lessons learned that inform our ongoing efforts to promote faculty engagement with diverse teaching and learning communities.
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
- Donovan, S. S. (2018). Fostering and Sustaining Interdisciplinary Faculty Communities Around Undergraduate Teaching: Insights from the QUBES Project. Math Modeling Hub, QUBES Educational Resources. doi:10.25334/Q4ZX4V