Appendix C
Laboratory Issues
RESOURCES ON INQUIRY-BASED LABS
Attracting Students to Science: Undergraduate and Precollege Programs,
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Bethesda, Md., 1992.
Describes HHMI-funded projects, including laboratory projects, at 96
different colleges and universities.
BioQUEST Curriculum Consortium
John R. Jungck and Patti Soderberg, Directors
Department of Biology, Beloit College
700 College Street
Beloit, WI 53511
(608) 363-2743
bioquest@beloit.edu
The BioQUEST Curriculum Consortium is a consortium of biologists, science
education researchers, historians and philosophers of biology, computer
scientists, academic computing specialists, designers, cognitive psychologists,
curriculum theorists, and others who are committed to transforming biology
education through the extensive use of research and research-like experiences
in learning biology. Members are interested in issues related to teaching
and learning biology, the use of technological innovations, and the potential
impact of these technologies on learning theory and the structure of schools.
One of BioQUEST's major goals is the creation and dissemination of innovative
and flexible instructional learning tools and the establishment of a communication
network for like-minded biology faculty.
Workshop Physics Project
Priscilla W. Laws
Department of Physics and Astronomy
Dickinson College
Carlisle, PA 17013
(717) 243-1242
The Workshop Physics project at Dickinson College represents an attempt
to redesign the teaching methods in introductory physics courses to take
advantage of recent findings in physics education research and introduce
students to the use of modern computer tools. Students meet in three two-
hour sessions each week. There are no formal lectures. The course content
has been reduced by about 25 percent as compared with the normal curriculum.
Each section has one instructor, two undergraduate teaching assistants,
and up to twenty-four students. Each pair of students shares the use of
a microcomputer and an extensive collection of scientific apparatus and
other gadgets. Among other things, students pitch baseballs, whack bowling
balls with rubber hammers, pull objects up inclined planes, attempt pirouettes,
build electronic circuits, explore electrical unknowns, ignite paper with
compressed gas, and devise engine cycles using rubber bands. The Workshop
labs are staffed during evening and weekend hours with undergraduate teaching
assistants.
Successful Approaches to Teaching Introductory Science Courses, William
J. McIntosh and Mario W. Caprio, editors, Society for College Science Teachers,
1992.
This monograph contains descriptions of eleven unique introductory science
courses. These courses are taught at a wide variety of institutions, from
community colleges to research universities, and cover all of the sciences.
Each paper contains an in-depth discussion of a particular course as well
as some theoretical background about why the course was changed and de signed.
Some of the techniques described in the papers include having students design
their own lab experiments, using computers to link lectures and laboratories,
and requiring students to complete individual research projects.
RESOURCES ON UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH ACTIVITIES
In addition to the organizations listed below, many professional societies
(Appendix A) have committees or programs on undergraduate research in their
field, and we urge you to contact them for specific information.
Council on Undergraduate Research
John G. Stevens, National Executive Officer
University of North Carolina at Asheville
One University Heights
Asheville, NC 28804-3299
cur@UNCA.edu
CUR'S goal is to promote research in the sciences and mathematics at
predominately undergraduate institutions. CUR publishes directories of departments
whose faculty and students are involved in undergraduate re search, holds
regional and national conferences, publishes a newsletter, and has a National
Information Center for Undergraduate Research at its national office in
Asheville, N.C.
National Conferences on Undergraduate Research
c/o Professor Tom Werner
Union College
Department of Chemistry
Schenectady, NY 12308
wernert@ gar.union.edu
(518) 388-6789 (fax)
National meetings are held every spring for undergraduate students in
all fields to present the results of their research or artistic or scholarly
work in oral and poster sessions. Over 1,200 students from all academic
disciplines gather each year for these presentations by their peers from
hundreds of colleges and universities.
LABORATORY SAFETY
Berry, K. O 1989. Safety in the chemical laboratory: safety concerns at
the local laboratory. J. Chem. Educ. 66(2):A58-A60.
Furr, A. K., ed. 1990. CRC Handbook of Laboratory Safety, 3rd ed. Boca
Raton, Fla.: CRC Press.
Gannaway, S. P. 1990. Chemical handling and waste disposal issues at
liberal arts colleges. J. Chem. Educ. 67(7):A183-84.
Gass, J. R. 1990. Chemistry, courtrooms, and common sense. Part I: Negligence
and duty. J. Chem. Educ. 67(1):51-55.
Mahn, W. J. 1991. Fundamentals of Laboratory Safety: Physical Hazards
in the Academic Laboratory. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.
National Research Council, Committee on Prudent Practices for Handling,
Storage, and Disposal of Chemicals in Laboratories. 1995. Prudent Practices
in the Laboratory: Handling and Disposal of Chemicals. Washington, D.C.:
National Academy Press.
Rayburn, S. R. 1990. The Foundations of Laboratory Safety: a Guide for
the Biomedical Laboratory. New York: Springer-Verlag. |