4.1 Article

Pre-lab video demonstrations to enhance students' laboratory experience in a first-year chemical engineering class

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY EDUCATION
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 29-38

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bmb.21688

Keywords

blended teaching and learning; chemical engineering; student assessment; virtual laboratory; visual communication

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This study improves the teaching method of laboratory demonstrations in a chemical engineering course at the university by utilizing digital technology. Video demonstrations allow students to acquire the necessary knowledge and understanding before conducting the experiments, reducing the burden on facilities and staff. The results of knowledge-based quizzes and student surveys demonstrate the positive impact of pre-lab videos in increasing student participation and improving learning outcomes.
The limited capabilities of teaching laboratories, combined with an increasing number of students enrolled in university, require constant augmentation of instructional approaches. By enhancing laboratory demonstrations with digital technology, these structural issues can be addressed while at the same time enhancing student understanding and learning. Our case study focuses on the fermentation lab part of the Reaction Equilibria and Thermodynamics (RET) module, a first-year chemical engineering course at the University of Birmingham. Video demonstrations were used to introduce students to the laboratory set-ups and walk them through each step and technique. The video demonstrations allowed the students to attend the in-person lab sessions having established knowledge and understanding of the processes involved and the outcomes desired, which decreased the burden on the facilities and the staff. A knowledge-based quiz and a student survey conducted at the end of the module showed that the pre-lab videos encouraged more active participation in the laboratory sessions and reinforced learning. Approximately 70% of the students polled in the first survey conducted within this project felt more confident going into the laboratory sessions after watching the pre-lab videos and attempting the knowledge quiz, while 92% of the students polled in the second survey judged the pre-lab video sessions as beneficial to them. Overall, the teaching method has the potential to improve student participation and access, boost confidence and learning, and provided a more structured and flexible approach to laboratory learning outcomes.

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