3.8 Article

CREARE: A Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience to Study the Responses of the Endangered Coral Acropora Cervicornis to a Changing Environment

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Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/jmbe.v22i1.2253C

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Funding

  1. University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus Office of Research
  2. University of Puerto Rico, Graduate Studies Institutional Research Fund (FIPI)
  3. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA), National Sea Grant Program Grant [NA14OAR4170068, R/105-02-16]

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Students involved in scientific research experiences are more likely to pursue advanced degrees and careers in STEM fields. A semester-long course-based undergraduate research experience, CREARE, was developed to introduce students to research benefits. Through experiments and data analysis, students made contributions to the research project and showed improved performance and attitudes towards science.
There is mounting evidence to support that students who participate in scientific research experiences are more likely to continue on to advanced degrees and careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). To introduce more students to the benefits of research, we have drawn on an ongoing project aimed at understanding how the Caribbean staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis responds to environmental fluctuations to develop a semester-long course-based undergraduate research experience (CURE), entitled CREARE (Coral Response to Environment Authentic Research Experience). The main mode of instruction in CREARE is through topic modules, and course evaluation is achieved through writing assignments. Students in CREARE perform experiments in the laboratory to measure the abundance of photo-protective proteins in coral tissue from samples collected at different depths and at different times of the year and analyze environmental data using the R programming language. CREARE participants have contributed to the progress of the research project by generating novel data and making improvements to experimental protocols. Furthermore, pre- and post-course assessment of content knowledge revealed that students perform significantly better on a written exam after participating in CREARE, while also displaying appreciable shifts in attitudes toward science in student perception surveys. In addition, through qualitative analysis of focus group interviews, we gathered evidence to suggest that mediating variables that predict students' persistence in science are bolstered through our application of the CURE modality. Overall, CREARE can serve as a model for developing more research-based courses that successfully engage students in scientific research.

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