journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16353401/using-long-term-time-lapse-imaging-of-mammalian-cell-cycle-progression-for-laboratory-instruction-and-analysis
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Edward H Hinchcliffe
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16353400/organic-first-a-biology-friendly-chemistry-curriculum
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
I David Reingold
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16344860/video-views-and-reviews-gastrulation-and-the-fashioning-of-animal-embryos
#3
REVIEW
Christopher Watters
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16344859/from-the-national-academies-ongoing-challenges-to-evolution-education-resources-and-activities-of-the-national-academies
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jay B Labov
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16344858/infusing-active-learning-into-the-large-enrollment-biology-class-seven-strategies-from-the-simple-to-complex
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deborah Allen, Kimberly Tanner
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16341261/information-literacy-in-biology-education-an-example-from-an-advanced-cell-biology-course
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John R Porter
Information literacy skills are critically important for the undergraduate biology student. The ability to find, understand, evaluate, and use information, whether from the scientific literature or from Web resources, is essential for a good understanding of a topic and for the conduct of research. A project in which students receive information literacy instruction and then proceed to select, update, and write about a current research topic in an upper-level cell biology course is described. Students research the chosen topic using paper and electronic resources, generate a list of relevant articles, prepare abstracts based on papers read, and, finally, prepare a "state-of-the-art" paper on the topic...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16341260/teaching-research-integrity-and-bioethics-to-science-undergraduates
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julio F Turrens
Undergraduate students in the Department of Biomedical Sciences at the University of South Alabama, Mobile, are required to take a course entitled "Issues in Biomedical Sciences," designed to increase students' awareness about bioethical questions and issues concerning research integrity. This paper describes the main features of this course and summarizes the results of a survey designed to evaluate the students' perceptions about the course. A summary of this study was presented at the 2002 Conference on Research Integrity in Potomac, MD, sponsored by the Office of Research Integrity of the National Institutes of Health...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16341259/teaching-systems-biology-an-active-learning-approach
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anuj Kumar
With genomics well established in modern molecular biology, recent studies have sought to further the discipline by integrating complementary methodologies into a holistic depiction of the molecular mechanisms underpinning cell function. This genomic subdiscipline, loosely termed "systems biology," presents the biology educator with both opportunities and obstacles: The benefit of exposing students to this cutting-edge scientific methodology is manifest, yet how does one convey the breadth and advantage of systems biology while still engaging the student? Here, I describe an active-learning approach to the presentation of systems biology...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16341258/the-use-of-a-knowledge-survey-as-an-indicator-of-student-learning-in-an-introductory-biology-course
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nancy Bowers, Maureen Brandon, Cynthia D Hill
A knowledge survey (KS) is a series of content-based questions sequenced in order of presentation during a course. Students do not answer the questions; rather, they rank their confidence in their ability to answer each question. A 304-question KS was designed and implemented for a multisection, multi-instructor introductory biology course to determine whether this tool could be used to assess student learning. The KS was administered during the first 2 wk and the last 2 wk of the semester online via WebCT...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16341257/teaching-more-by-lecturing-less
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer K Knight, William B Wood
We carried out an experiment to determine whether student learning gains in a large, traditionally taught, upper-division lecture course in developmental biology could be increased by partially changing to a more interactive classroom format. In two successive semesters, we presented the same course syllabus using different teaching styles: in fall 2003, the traditional lecture format; and in spring 2004, decreased lecturing and addition of student participation and cooperative problem solving during class time, including frequent in-class assessment of understanding...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16341256/genome-science-a-video-tour-of-the-washington-university-genome-sequencing-center-for-high-school-and-undergraduate-students
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Susan K Flowers, Carla Easter, Andrea Holmes, Brian Cohen, April E Bednarski, Elaine R Mardis, Richard K Wilson, Sarah C R Elgin
Sequencing of the human genome has ushered in a new era of biology. The technologies developed to facilitate the sequencing of the human genome are now being applied to the sequencing of other genomes. In 2004, a partnership was formed between Washington University School of Medicine Genome Sequencing Center's Outreach Program and Washington University Department of Biology Science Outreach to create a video tour depicting the processes involved in large-scale sequencing. "Sequencing a Genome: Inside the Washington University Genome Sequencing Center" is a tour of the laboratory that follows the steps in the sequencing pipeline, interspersed with animated explanations of the scientific procedures used at the facility...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16240517/points-of-view-content-versus-process-is-this-a-fair-choice-can-nonmajors-courses-lead-to-biological-literacy-do-majors-courses-do-any-better
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael W Klymkowsky
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16220145/using-a-module-based-laboratory-to-incorporate-inquiry-into-a-large-cell-biology-course
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David R Howard, Jennifer A Miskowski
Because cell biology has rapidly increased in breadth and depth, instructors are challenged not only to provide undergraduate science students with a strong, up-to-date foundation of knowledge, but also to engage them in the scientific process. To these ends, revision of the Cell Biology Lab course at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse was undertaken to allow student involvement in experimental design, emphasize data collection and analysis, make connections to the "big picture," and increase student interest in the field...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16220144/how-effective-are-simulated-molecular-level-experiments-for-teaching-diffusion-and-osmosis
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eli Meir, Judith Perry, Derek Stal, Susan Maruca, Eric Klopfer
Diffusion and osmosis are central concepts in biology, both at the cellular and organ levels. They are presented several times throughout most introductory biology textbooks (e.g., Freeman, 2002), yet both processes are often difficult for students to understand (Odom, 1995; Zuckerman, 1994; Sanger et al., 2001; and results herein). Students have deep-rooted misconceptions about how diffusion and osmosis work, especially at the molecular level. We hypothesized that this might be in part due to the inability to see and explore these processes at the molecular level...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16220143/students-investigating-the-antiproliferative-effects-of-synthesized-drugs-on-mouse-mammary-tumor-cells
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rasha Hammamieh, Margery Anderson, Katharine Carr, Christine N Tran, Debra L Yourick, Marti Jett
The potential for personalized cancer management has long intrigued experienced researchers as well as the naïve student intern. Personalized cancer treatments based on a tumor's genetic profile are now feasible and can reveal both the cells' susceptibility and resistance to chemotherapeutic agents. In a weeklong laboratory investigation that mirrors current cancer research, undergraduate and advanced high school students determine the efficacy of common pharmacological agents through in vitro testing. Using mouse mammary tumor cell cultures treated with "unknown" drugs historically recommended for breast cancer treatment, students are introduced to common molecular biology techniques from in vitro cell culture to fluorescence microscopy...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16220142/an-inquiry-into-protein-structure-and-genetic-disease-introducing-undergraduates-to-bioinformatics-in-a-large-introductory-course
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
April E Bednarski, Sarah C R Elgin, Himadri B Pakrasi
This inquiry-based lab is designed around genetic diseases with a focus on protein structure and function. To allow students to work on their own investigatory projects, 10 projects on 10 different proteins were developed. Students are grouped in sections of 20 and work in pairs on each of the projects. To begin their investigation, students are given a cDNA sequence that translates into a human protein with a single mutation. Each case results in a genetic disease that has been studied and recorded in the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) database...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16220141/applying-instructional-design-theories-to-bioinformatics-education-in-microarray-analysis-and-primer-design-workshops
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aviv Shachak, Ron Ophir, Eitan Rubin
The need to support bioinformatics training has been widely recognized by scientists, industry, and government institutions. However, the discussion of instructional methods for teaching bioinformatics is only beginning. Here we report on a systematic attempt to design two bioinformatics workshops for graduate biology students on the basis of Gagne's Conditions of Learning instructional design theory. This theory, although first published in the early 1970s, is still fundamental in instructional design and instructional technology...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16220140/points-of-view-content-versus-process-is-this-a-fair-choice-undergraduate-biology-courses-for-nonscientists-toward-a-lived-curriculum
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robin L Wright
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15917875/molecular-and-cellular-biology-animations-development-and-impact-on-student-learning
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Phillip McClean, Christina Johnson, Roxanne Rogers, Lisa Daniels, John Reber, Brian M Slator, Jeff Terpstra, Alan White
Educators often struggle when teaching cellular and molecular processes because typically they have only two-dimensional tools to teach something that plays out in four dimensions. Learning research has demonstrated that visualizing processes in three dimensions aids learning, and animations are effective visualization tools for novice learners and aid with long-term memory retention. The World Wide Web Instructional Committee at North Dakota State University has used these research results as an inspiration to develop a suite of high-quality animations of molecular and cellular processes...
2005: Cell Biology Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15917874/an-inexpensive-gel-electrophoresis-based-polymerase-chain-reaction-method-for-quantifying-mrna-levels
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William D Bradford, Laty Cahoon, Sara R Freel, Laura L Mays Hoopes, Todd T Eckdahl
In order to engage their students in a core methodology of the new genomics era, an ever-increasing number of faculty at primarily undergraduate institutions are gaining access to microarray technology. Their students are conducting successful microarray experiments designed to address a variety of interesting questions. A next step in these teaching and research laboratory projects is often validation of the microarray data for individual selected genes. In the research community, this usually involves the use of real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a technology that requires instrumentation and reagents that are prohibitively expensive for most undergraduate institutions...
2005: Cell Biology Education
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