(Press-News.org) Don't let low grades haunt your students. A new study in the Journal of Animal Science shows that performance in foundational biology courses is a strong predictor of performance in high-level animal science courses.
In a study of 1,516 students over 7 years, researchers from Kansas State University found that students who did well in biology also performed well in a rigorous genetics course. This result was not surprising, but the researchers were struck by the importance of timing. Undergraduate students did best when they waited at least a year to take the genetics course.
"Genetics is a very hard class," said Dr. Jennifer Minick Bormann, co-author of the study and associate professor in the Department of Animal Sciences and Industry at Kansas State University. "That is not a good place for a brand-new freshman."
At Kansas State University, biology is a pre-requisite for genetics. Many students try to fulfill that pre-requisite by earning college credits for biology courses during high school. The data show that students who take biology at Kansas State do better in genetics than students that bring that course in from other sources.
Minick Bormann said this study could help advisors and their students plan more realistic class schedules. By taking genetics as sophomores and juniors, students can perform well and prepare themselves for advanced courses in subjects like animal breeding.
"We need to sit down as advisors and talk about it," said Minick Bormann. "I would expect our students to be similar to students at other large land grant universities."
The researchers also found that students did not forget what they learned in biology, even if they waited several years to take genetics. That is good news for animal science students and advisors.
###
The study was titled "Factors affecting student performance in an undergraduate genetics course." It can be read in full at journalofanimalscience.org.
Scientific contact:
Dr. Jennifer Minick Bormann
Kansas State University
785-532-1222 / jbormann@k-state.edu
Media contact:
Madeline McCurry-Schmidt
American Society of Animal Science
217-689-2435 / madelinems@asas.org
A bad biology grade sticks around
Study suggests university advisors may want to rethink student schedules
2013-05-31
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Difference in arterial health seen in highly active college-age people compared to inactive peers
2013-05-31
Indiana University researchers found that people in their 20s already began to demonstrate arterial stiffening -- when arteries become less compliant as blood pumps through the body -- but their highly active peers did not.
The researchers made a similar discovery with middle-age men and women, finding that highly active study participants did not show the arterial stiffening that typically comes with aging, regardless of their gender or age. A reduction in compliance of the body's arteries is considered a risk factor, predictive of future cardiovascular disease, such ...
TCE exposure linked to increased risk of some cancers
2013-05-31
Trichloroethylene (TCE) exposure has possible links to increased liver cancer risk, and the relationship between TCE exposure and risks of cancers of low incidence and those with confounding by lifestyle and other factors need further study, according to a study published May 30 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
TCE is a chlorinated dry-cleaning solvent and degreaser that has been widely used for approximately the last 100 years and has shown carcinogenicity in rodents. Previous epidemiologic studies have shown a reported increase in cancer risk in humans ...
SwRI-led team calculates the radiation exposure associated with a trip Mars
2013-05-31
Boulder, Colo. — May 30, 2013 — On November 26, 2011, the Mars Science Laboratory began a 253-day, 560-million-kilometer journey to deliver the Curiosity rover to the Red Planet. En route, the Southwest Research Institute-led Radiation Assessment Detector (RAD) made detailed measurements of the energetic particle radiation environment inside the spacecraft, providing important insights for future human missions to Mars.
"In terms of accumulated dose, it's like getting a whole-body CT scan once every five or six days," said Dr. Cary Zeitlin, a principal scientist in SwRI's ...
Cruise to Mars illuminates radiation risk to future astronauts
2013-05-31
Once the stuff of science fiction, a human mission to Mars may be becoming more feasible, and a new report in the 31 May issue of Science provides insight into the relevant radiation hazards.
Exposure to radiation has long been known to be a problem for participants in deep space missions. Because these missions can take years, they expose anything or anyone on board to high energy particles called Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCRs), and also to lower-energy Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs). Characterizing the radiation that spacecraft destined for Mars or other deep space ...
Human activity echoes through Brazilian rainforest
2013-05-31
This news release is available in Portuguese, French, Arabic, Japanese and Chinese.
The disappearance of large, fruit-eating birds from tropical forests in Brazil has caused the region's forest palms to produce smaller, less successful seeds over the past century, researchers say. The findings provide evidence that human activity can trigger fast-paced evolutionary changes in natural populations.
Mauro Galetti from the Universidade Estadual Paulista in São Paulo, Brazil, along with an international team of colleagues, used patches of rainforest that had been ...
Quitting smoking: Licensed medications are effective
2013-05-31
Nicotine replacement therapy and other licensed drugs can help people quit smoking, according to a new systematic review published in The Cochrane Library. The study, which is an overview of previous Cochrane reviews, supports the use of the smoking cessation medications that are already widely licensed internationally, and shows that another drug licensed in Russia could hold potential as an effective and affordable treatment.
In Europe and the US the only medications currently licensed for smoking cessation are nicotine replacement therapies (NRTs) such as nicotine ...
Probiotics prevent diarrhoea related to antibiotic use
2013-05-31
Probiotic supplements have the potential to prevent diarrhoea caused by antibiotics, according to a new Cochrane systematic review. The authors studied Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) infections in patients taking antibiotics and found symptoms of diarrhoea were substantially reduced when patients were also treated with probiotics.
Antibiotics disturb the beneficial bacteria that live in the gut and allow other harmful bacteria like C. difficile to take hold. Although some people infected with C. difficile show no symptoms, others suffer diarrhoea or colitis. The ...
Multi-national study identifies links between genetic variants and educational attainment
2013-05-31
A multi-national team of researchers has identified genetic markers that predict educational attainment by pooling data from more than 125,000 individuals in the United States, Australia, and 13 western European countries.
The study, which appears in the journal Science, was conducted by the Social Science Genetic Association Consortium (SSGAC), which includes researchers at NYU, Erasmus University, Cornell University, Harvard University, the University of Bristol, and the University of Queensland, among other institutions.
The SSGAC conducted what is called a genome-wide ...
Atom by atom, bond by bond, a chemical reaction caught in the act
2013-05-31
When Felix Fischer of the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) set out to develop nanostructures made of graphene using a new, controlled approach to chemical reactions, the first result was a surprise: spectacular images of individual carbon atoms and the bonds between them.
"We weren't thinking about making beautiful images; the reactions themselves were the goal," says Fischer, a staff scientist in Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division (MSD) and a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. "But ...
Good kidney health begins before birth
2013-05-31
Researchers have found that conditions in the womb can affect kidney development and have serious health implications for the child not only immediately after birth, but decades later.
In a paper published today in The Lancet an international team, including Monash University's Professor John Bertram and the University of Queensland's Professor Wendy Hoy, reviewed existing, peer-reviewed research on kidney health and developmental programming - the effects of the in utero environment on adult health.
The accumulated evidence linked low birth weight and prematurity ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
House sparrows in northern Norway can help us save other endangered animals
Crohn's & Colitis Foundation survey reveals more than 1/3 of young adults with IBD face step therapy insurance barriers
Tethered UAV autonomous knotting on environmental structures for transport
Decentralized social media platforms unlock authentic consumer feedback
American Pediatric Society announces Vanderbilt University School of Medicine as host institution for APS Howland Visiting Professor Program
Scientists discover first method to safely back up quantum information
A role for orange pigments in birds and human redheads
Pathways to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions for Southeast Asia
A JBNU–KIMS collaborative study on a cost-effective alloy matches superalloys for power plants and energy infrastructure
New study overturns long-held model of how plants coordinate immune responses.
New AI model predicts disease risk while you sleep
Scientists discover molecular ‘reshuffle’ and crack an 80-year-old conundrum
How stressors during pregnancy impact the developing fetal brain
Electrons lag behind the nucleus
From fungi to brain cells: one scientist's winding path reveals how epigenomics shapes neural destiny
Schizophrenia and osteoporosis share 195 genetic loci, highlighting unexpected biological bridges between brain and bone
Schizophrenia-linked genetic variant renders key brain receptor completely unresponsive to both natural and therapeutic compounds
Innovative review reveals overlooked complexity in cellular energy sensor's dual roles in Alzheimer's disease
Autism research reframed: Why heterogeneity is the data, not the noise
Brazil's genetic treasure trove: supercentenarians reveal secrets of extreme human longevity
The (metabolic) cost of life
CFRI special issue call for papers: New Frontiers in Sustainable Finance
HKU Engineering scholar demonstrates the smallest all-printed infrared photodetectors to date
Precision empowerment for brain "eavesdropping": CAS team develops triple-electrode integrated functional electrode for simultaneous monitoring of neural signals and chemical transmitters during sleep
Single-capillary endothelial dysfunction resolved by optoacoustic mesoscopy
HKU three research projects named among ‘Top 10 Innovation & Technology News in Hong Kong 2025’ showcasing excellence in research and technology transfer
NLRSeek: A reannotation-based pipeline for mining missing NLR genes in sequenced genomes
A strand and whole genome duplication–aware collinear gene identification tool
Light storage in light cages: A revolutionary approach to on-chip quantum memories
Point spread function decoupling in computational fluorescence microscopy
[Press-News.org] A bad biology grade sticks aroundStudy suggests university advisors may want to rethink student schedules