PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Transfer of knowledge learned seen as a key to improving science education

University of Oregon science literacy leader is part of interactive workshop centered on 'active learning'

2014-02-16
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO -- (Feb. 16, 2014) -- Attendees of a workshop at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science will be immersed into "active learning," an approach inspired by national reports targeting U.S. science education, in general, and, more specifically, the 60 percent dropout rate of students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

"The goal of this session is to take many ideas around improving science education that are out there and make them applicable to the classroom," says Eleanor "Elly" V.H. Vandegrift, associate director of the University of Oregon's Science Literacy Program and workshop co-organizer. "My hope is that anybody who comes to this workshop will find something that they can take home and use immediately in the classroom."

The three-hour session, "Thinking Skills for the 21st Century: Teaching for Transfer," will focus on how science students learn material, but, more importantly, how well they transfer the concepts they've learned into their next class -- in the same or a different discipline -- or into their jobs. Interested faculty who attend the session will be updated on instructional approaches that help nurture such transfer, and they will spend time engaged in individual and small group activities.

Transfer starts with good teaching, says Vandegrift, whose UO program is supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. "I think what happens a lot of times in traditional classrooms is that when students sit and just listen to a lecture, they are not processing the information."

The impetus for the workshop emerged from three reports: "Education for Life and Work: Developing Transferable Knowledge and Skills in the 21st Century," produced by the National Research Council and published in 2012 as a book by the National Academy of Sciences; "Engage to Excel" (2012) by the President's Council on Advisors in Science and Technology to improve both K-12 and undergraduate college education; and 2011's "Vision and Change in Undergraduate Biology Education, A Call to Action," that emerged from a National Science Foundation-supported conference organized by AAAS. (Links to the three reports are provided below.)

Each of four presenters will provide brief remarks built around activities designed to engage the attendees. Vandegrift will discuss the development of learning outcomes and objectives that can be measured. Her hands-on work sample will be a large poster that participants will study and apply Post-it notes to show how their own ideas may relate to other people's ideas.

Vandegrift's portion follow the session-opener by Amy B. Mulnix, a cell biologist at Earlham College in Richmond, Ind., on her implementation of active learning after realizing that her students were not learning as expected. Mulnix will detail her experience and address what teaching for transfer really means.

Following Vandegrift will be physicist S. Raj Chaudhury, associate director of the Biggio Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning at Auburn University, and Jennifer R. Yates, a neuroscientist at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Chaudhury's portion of the workshop will focus on new ways to use clicker technology to help students apply principles learned in the classroom to new situations. Yates will present a case study of an active-learning effort that went awry in a group situation as part her focus on "Creating Opportunities for Practice-with-Feedback."

"Research has shown that students retain information longer if they have opportunities to practice with it," Vandegrift said. "This what I mean about transfer. There are many ways a faculty member can give students an opportunity to practice with the content. The ideas of how people learn are applicable across disciplines. The focus right now is on science."

INFORMATION:

SESSION: "Thinking Skills for the 21st Century: Teaching for Transfer," 8:30-11:30 a.m., Sunday, Feb. 16, Hyatt Regency Chicago, Comiskey Room

Relevant links: UO Science Literacy Program: http://scilit.uoregon.edu/ About Vandegrift: http://scilit.uoregon.edu/Administration_profiles.html About Mulnix: http://www.earlham.edu/biochemistry/faculty-staff/profile/?username=amymul&r=3353 About Chaudhury and the Biggio Center: http://wp.auburn.edu/biggio/biggio-staff/ About Yates: http://psychology.owu.edu/YatesJennifer.html Report, Education for Life and Work: http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=13398 Engage to Excel: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/fact_sheet_final.pdf Vision and Change: http://visionandchange.org/


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Using crowdsourcing to solve complex problems

2014-02-16
If two minds are better than one, what could thousands of minds accomplish? The possibilities are endless -- if researchers can learn to effectively harness and utilize all that knowledge. Northwestern University professor Haoqi Zhang designs new forms of crowd-supported, mixed-initiative systems that tightly integrate crowd work, community process and intelligent user interfaces to solve complex problems that no machine nor person could solve alone. Zhang's systems can ease challenges in designing a custom trip or planning an academic conference, for example. Zhang ...

What is known about the pathway to aging well?

2014-02-16
CHICAGO --- Daniel K. Mroczek, professor of psychology and professor of medical social sciences in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University, will discuss his research at a symposium on resilient aging during the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) annual meeting in Chicago. The interdisciplinary symposium "The Science of Resilient Aging" will be held from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 16, in Grand Ballroom A in the Hyatt Regency Chicago. Through his research, Mroczek has found that personality traits have emerged ...

Thinking it through: Scientists seek to unlock mysteries of the brain

Thinking it through: Scientists seek to unlock mysteries of the brain
2014-02-16
Chicago, Illinois - Understanding the human brain is one of the greatest challenges facing 21st century science. If we can rise to this challenge, we will gain profound insights into what makes us human, develop new treatments for brain diseases, and build revolutionary new computing technologies that will have far reaching effects, not only in neuroscience. Scientists at the European Human Brain Project—set to announce more than a dozen new research partnerships worth Eur 8.3 million in funding later this month—the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and the US BRAIN ...

Loneliness is a major health risk for older adults

Loneliness is a major health risk for older adults
2014-02-16
Feeling extreme loneliness can increase an older person's chances of premature death by 14 percent, according to research by John Cacioppo, professor of psychology at the University of Chicago. Cacioppo and his colleagues' work shows that the impact of loneliness on premature death is nearly as strong as the impact of disadvantaged socioeconomic status, which they found increases the chances of dying early by 19 percent. A 2010 meta-analysis showed that loneliness has twice the impact on early death as does obesity, he said. Cacioppo, the Tiffany ...

Misconceptions of science and religion found in new study

Misconceptions of science and religion found in new study
2014-02-16
The public's view that science and religion can't work in collaboration is a misconception that stunts progress, according to a new survey of more than 10,000 Americans, scientists and evangelical Protestants. The study by Rice University also found that scientists and the general public are surprisingly similar in their religious practices. The study, "Religious Understandings of Science (RUS)," was conducted by sociologist Elaine Howard Ecklund and presented today in Chicago during the annual American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) conference. ...

Archaeologists lend long-term perspective to food security and climate shock

2014-02-16
CHICAGO – What role does pre-existing vulnerabilities play for people who experience a climate shock? Does it amplify the effects of the climate shock or is effect negligible? Four Arizona State University archaeologists are looking into this as part of an international team examining how people can be most resilient to climate change when it comes to food security. The group questioned whether vulnerability to food shortages prior to a climate shock – not the actual experience of the food shortage – is related to the scale of impact of that shock. They found a strong ...

Cultural foundations of human social behavior

2014-02-16
CHICAGO --- Joan Chiao, assistant professor of psychology in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University, will discuss her research "Cultural and Neural Basis of Empathy" at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Chicago. Her presentation is part of the symposium "Physiological and Cultural Foundations of Human Social Behavior" to be held from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15 in Grand Ballroom E of the Hyatt Regency Chicago. The session will focus on recent findings in social neurosciences and ...

Contemplating the workplace of tomorrow

2014-02-16
CHICAGO --- Robert Gordon, the Stanley G. Harris Professor in the department of economics in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences at Northwestern University, will present "Long-Term Unemployment, Shrinking Participation and Future Economic Growth" at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Chicago. His presentation is part of the symposium "Will the Workplace of Tomorrow Have Any Workers? Computing, Productivity and Jobs" to be held from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 15 in the Water Tower room at the Hyatt Regency Chicago. In ...

Top-down and bottom-up approach needed to conserve potato agrobiodiversity

Top-down and bottom-up approach  needed to conserve potato agrobiodiversity
2014-02-16
Mashed, smashed and fried, Americans love potatoes, but only a few varieties are grown in much of North American agriculture. In South America, where potatoes originated, more than 5,000 varieties continue to exist. A Penn State geographer is gathering all the information he can about the agrobiodiversity of these uniquely adapted tubers with an eye toward sustainability of this fourth largest food crop worldwide. "In the U.S. we rely primarily on 10 to 12 types of potatoes total," said Karl Zimmerer, department head and professor of geography. "In fact, mostly we use ...

Robotic fish aids understanding of how animals move

2014-02-16
The weakly electric black ghost knifefish of the Amazon basin has inspired Northwestern University's Malcolm MacIver and an interdisciplinary team of researchers to develop agile fish robots that could lead to a vast improvement in underwater vehicles used to study fragile coral reefs, repair damaged deep-sea oil rigs or investigate sunken ships. MacIver will discuss the research at a press briefing, "Robots from Nature: Making Mechanical Animals," to be held at 1 p.m. CST Saturday, Feb. 15, in Vevey Room 3 of the Swissôtel Chicago. The briefing is part of the American ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Insurer exits after the Inflation Reduction Act Part D redesign

Researchers gain insights into the brain’s ‘dimmer switch’

Brain scans reveal what happens in the mind when insight strikes

Loss of Medicare Part D subsidy linked to higher mortality among low-income older adults

Persistent mucus plugs linked to faster decline in lung function for patients with COPD

Incomplete team staffing, burnout, and work intentions among US physicians

The key to spotting dyslexia early could be AI-powered handwriting analysis

New nanoparticle could make cancer treatment safer, more effective

A new study provides insights into cleaning up noise in quantum entanglement

Artificial intelligence and genetics can help farmers grow corn with less fertilizer

Daratumumab may help cancer patients with low physical function to live longer, study finds

Stranger things: How Netflix teaches economics

Energy and memory: A new neural network paradigm

How we think about protecting data

AAN issues Evidence in Focus article on Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene therapy

Could a mini-stroke leave lasting fatigue?

Is it time to redefine the public health workforce? New research proposes a broader, more inclusive approach

Tiny gas bubbles reveal secrets of Hawaiian volcanoes

Gelada monkeys understand complex "conversations" involving distress calls and prosocial comforting responses, exhibiting surprise when such vocal exchanges are manipulated to violate their expectatio

New poison dart frog discovered in the Amazon's Juruá River basin is blue with copper-colored legs, and represents one of just two novel Ranitomeya species in a decade

Shifting pollution abroad is a major reason why democratic countries are rated more environmentally friendly compared to non-democratic states

Groups of AI agents spontaneously form their own social norms without human help, suggests study

Different ways of ‘getting a grip’

Handy octopus robot can adapt to its surroundings

The ripple effect of small earthquakes near major faults

Mass General Brigham researchers pinpoint ‘sweet spot’ for focused ultrasound to provide essential tremor relief

MRI scans could help detect life-threatening heart disease

NASA’s Magellan mission reveals possible tectonic activity on Venus

A step forward in treating serious genetic disorders prenatally

New study shows AI can predict child malnutrition, support prevention efforts

[Press-News.org] Transfer of knowledge learned seen as a key to improving science education
University of Oregon science literacy leader is part of interactive workshop centered on 'active learning'