Summer Institute
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  • 2009 Institute
  • The 2009 Summer Institute will be held June 21-27, 2009, at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, WI. Additional information will be made available in early 2009.
  • Participant map
  • Summer Institute teams have come from institutions coast to coast: from Florida to Alaska, from Hawaii to New England. See a new participant map to learn which institutions have sent teams to the Summer Institute.
End of featured activities

2004 Overview

THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES
Summer Institute on Undergraduate Education in Biology
Monday, August 16 to Friday, August 20, 2004
Overview and Agenda


2004 Co-Directors:
Jo Handelsman, University of Wisconsin
William B. Wood, University of Colorado

Location:
The Pyle Center
University of Wisconsin
702 Landgon Street
Madison, WI 53706-1487

Overall Strategy


The goal of the Summer Institute for Undergraduate Biology Education is to transform biology education at research universities by improving classroom education and attracting more students to research. We intend to train a new generation of faculty by introducing them to a scientific approach to teaching that reflects the way we function at researchers. The target group is novice and experienced instructors of introductory biology courses with high enrollments. We will select from the applicant pool 18 pairs of faculty from 18 different research universities. The Institute will include reflective writing, planning, reading, researching, and talking about teaching methods and philosophy, and will involve a mixture of presentations by expert teachers and development of new teaching materials by the participants in small groups. The outcomes will be a set of teaching materials that all of the participants will all test at their home institution in the ensuing academic year.

One set of materials that participants obtain from the Summer Institute will be used in the introductory biology courses and the other will form the basis for a seminar in mentoring directed toward graduate students and postdocs who are supervising undergraduates in the research lab. The mentoring materials are well-developed and tested, making it easy to offer with little preparation or time commitment (they were developed for eight 1-hour sessions with the students). The participants will be asked to arrange for someone to offer the mentoring seminar (as a formal course or an informal seminar) at their home institutions to students of any type - they maybe graduate students and postdocs or faculty colleagues. The materials developed for the introductory biology course and the mentoring seminar will be accompanied by assessment tools that the participants will administer or arrange for our evaluator to administer. The results of the initiatives from all of the campuses will be shared with the participants and published. The participants will be offered a fellowship to facilitate the implementation of these new teaching initiatives.

Participants are required to:
  • Teach introductory biology courses
  • Come in teams that include one junior and one senior member
  • Write a short teaching philosophy before arriving at the SI
  • Implement three modules developed at the SI into their introductory biology course during the '04-'05 academic year (modules might be a lesson substituted into an existing syllabus)
  • Offer, or recruit a colleague to offer, a seminar in mentoring for graduate students, postdocs, or faculty
  • Administer, or enable our evaluator to administer, assessments of the introductory biology units and mentoring course
  • Stay for the entire SI

Participants' campuses are required to:
  • Provide funds for participants to travel to the SI
  • Support and encourage the activities of the participants in their departments and campus-wide
  • Ensure that the activities associated with the Summer Institute are treated favorably by tenure committees

The National Academies Summer Institute will provide:
  • Lodging, food, and all other meeting expenses for participants
  • A $1,500 fellowship to each participants to facilitate their teaching (up to two per campus)
  • Resources, instructors, and evaluators to help participants develop and evaluate teaching materials
  • A listserv for all participants to communicate as they implement the teaching materials
  • Internet access for all participants throughout the SI
  • Data about the implementation at the end of the academic year following the SI

Structure of SI:
  • Talks on research about learning and various teaching methods will be presented
  • Work will be in small groups
  • Inquiry-based learning will be modeled by conference structure: participants will establish their teaching questions and hypotheses, design or find active, inquiry-based learning tools, plan their implementation, and determine how to assess student learning
  • Participants will write pre/post teaching philosophy (1-2 paragraphs)
  • Participants will write pre/post mentoring statement (1-2 sentences)
  • Participants will be accountable for implementing and evaluating course materials at home institutions and reporting findings to SI for publication
Participants will work in groups of 6. Groups will be organized around large principles of biology (genetics, cell biology, ecology, evolution, etc). Each member of the group must be able to teach (or influence the teaching of) this topic in the introductory course and groups will be assigned before the SI based on syllabi provided by participants. The groups will tentatively choose a specific concept (natural selection, genetic drift, energy transduction, etc) within their broad principle for which they will develop a "teachable unit," which should be 1-3 lectures or a lab. The materials they develop may be collected from the Internet, teaching books or journals, or developed during the workshop. The groups will modify the materials to fit their courses (incorporating modifications tailored to each campus), discuss their context in the course, and design assessment tools to evaluate learning.

Components of the Teachable Unit:
  • Teaching objectives
  • Summary of biology content
  • Course context
  • Approach to teaching
  • Assessment of learning

After the SI:
  • Participants will implement at three of the teachable units developed at the SI
  • Each topic identified will be taught by traditional methods (whatever those are) at 9 sites and with the tool developed at the SI at 9 others
  • Students at all sites will take a common pretest and posttest using a small number of conceptual questions
  • Participants will also coordinate or recruit a colleague to offer the mentoring seminar (this can be a small-scale process - they might even do it with their own graduate students who are mentoring undergraduate researchers or team up with a colleague to do it for two labs of graduate students)

Group facilitation
The SI staff will work with the groups, helping them hone their teachable units to be feasible units, finding materials, and providing advice. The staff will include the Steering Committee.


Monday, August 16

During day -- Lab visits and seminars with UW researchers (as available)

5:30 pm -- Registration

6:00 pm -- Dinner

7:00 pm -- Scientific Teaching - Jo Handelsman: Overview of Summer Institute; Brief Introductions

7:30 pm -- Keynote - Bruce Alberts

8:30 pm -- Opening Mixer

10:00 pm -- Adjourn for the evening



Tuesday, August 17

7:00 am -- Round Table Discussion/Breakfast

9:00 am -- Introductions - Jo Handelsman: Introduce participants to each other; Understand their expectations for the Summer Institute; Understand context in which they teach; Form groups (pre-assigned); Group brainstorming: What's your teaching question?; Small groups: Generate a hypothesis about your teaching question

10:30 am -- Break

10:45 am -- Scholarship of Teaching - Bill Wood: Findings, approaches, resources; Introduce the idea of approaching teaching with the same values as we do research; Summarize key research indicating success of active, inquiry-based learning; Introduce structure and goals of workshop

12:15 pm -- Lunch - Peter Spear

1:30 pm -- Presentations of Instructional Materials - Christina Matta and Whitney Robertson: Provide examples of instructional materials developed by young teachers; Set standard of scholarly approach to instructional materials (setting objectives, searching the literature, using assessment, scope); Engage participants in active, inquiry-based learning; Case study, compluter-based learning, lab

3:00 pm -- Break

3:30 pm -- Groups Initiate Projects: Tentatively choose topic for developing a teaching activity; What is your teaching question, challenge or hyopthesis?; Design a teachable unit to address your question, challenge, or hypothesis. What type of teaching method will you use (lecture, lab, other)?

4:30 pm -- Introduce Resources - Sarah Lauffer: Participants will have access to the Internet and an extensive library of books and articles on teaching and assessment; An overview will be provided and then participants will surf to gain an overview of the types of materials available to them.

5:30 pm -- Free Time

6:00 pm -- Dinner - Kenneth Wesson

8:30 pm -- Group Work: Develop project



Wednesday, August 18

7:00 am -- Round Table Discussion/Breakfast

9:00 am -- Assessment - Diane Ebert-May: Introduce central idea of assessment - build assessment into instructional materials; Introduce range of assessment tools - in class, computer-based, pre-test/post-test, etc.; Include demonstration.

10:30 am -- Break

10:45 am -- Active-Learning in Lectures - Randall Phillis: Introduce active lectures, use of small group work, problems, audience response technology; Includes time for discussion

12:15 pm -- Lunch

1:30 pm -- Inquiry-Based Labs - Jo Handelsman and Sarah Lauffer: Demonstrate and discuss use of inquiry-based labs and process of converting cookbook labs to inquiry-based labs.

3:00 pm -- Break

3:15 pm -- Group Work

6:00 pm -- Dinner

7:30 pm -- After-dinner gathering / Group Work



Thursday, August 19

7:00 am -- Round Table Discussion/Breakfast

9:00 am -- Active Learning Strategies - Robin Wright

10:30 am -- Break

10:45 am -- Group Work

12:15 pm -- Lunch with UW faculty: Mentoring Undergraduate Research Projects - Graham Hatful

1:30 pm -- Group Work: Complete projects.

3:00 pm -- Break

3:15 pm -- Group Work: Plan presentation.

4:30 pm -- Implementation: Panel discussion on implementation and team teaching.

6:00 pm -- Dinner

7:00 pm -- Mentoring - Jo Handelsman, Chris Pfund, Zakee Sabree, Melissa Christopherson : Case study demonstration; Discussion of course; Presentation of materials.



Friday, August 20

7:00 am -- Round Table Discussion/Breakfast

9:00 am -- Group Presentations: Groups #1 and 2 demonstrate and discuss use of teaching materials.

10:30 am -- Break

10:45 am -- Group Presentations: Groups #3 and 4 demonstrate and discuss use of teaching materials.

12:15 pm -- Lunch

1:30 pm -- Group Presentations: Groups #5 and 6 demonstrate and discuss use of teaching materials.

3:00 pm -- Break

3:15 pm -- Implementation and Assessment: Discuss implementation of each project at all sites and expectations for project evaluation and peer-review

5:30 pm -- Conclusion of Institute sessions

6:00 pm -- Dinner

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