4.3 Article

Moving Research-Based Learning in Life Sciences Upstream, and Beyond Borders: An International Group Research Project for High School Youth

期刊

OMICS-A JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
卷 27, 期 9, 页码 421-425

出版社

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/omi.2023.0079

关键词

youth life sciences education; research-based education; knowledge mobilization; scholar circulation; integrative biology; climate emergency; pedagogy

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International cooperation in science and research-based learning is crucial for the development of youth in the field of life sciences. The International Group Project (IGP), built upon the International Biology Olympiad (IBO), provides a unique opportunity for high school students from 32 countries to collaborate and conduct research in various domains of life sciences. Through this project, participants have the chance to create posters and present their research findings, showing the feasibility and importance of research-based learning in the life sciences.
International cooperation beyond borders, institutions, and intergenerationally is an important aspect of science and research-based learning. Timing of learning also matters. Early exposure to group research-based learning can potentially have lasting positive impacts on youth and their careers in life sciences. Here, we report our work on the International Group Project (IGP), which builds on the International Biology Olympiad (IBO) organized in Yerevan, Armenia, in 2022. The IBO is an annual international competition for high school students held since 1990 around the world. We envisioned the IGP as a novel opportunity for life sciences research-based education among youth. We formed diverse IGP research teams 2 months before the IBO, and comprised high school students from 32 countries, communicating in a digital environment via videoconferencing. Each team formulated a research question in an IGP theme from five domains of life sciences: Biomedicine, Molecular and cell biology, Bioinformatics and Artificial Intelligence, Bionics and Biomimicry, Across Species. Subsequently, team members collectively solved their research question by applying life sciences methodologies under supervision from a facilitator scientist. Each team created a poster based on their research and presented in-person to the public at a satellite activity at the IBO. A special subcommittee of the IBO International Jury graded posters and allocated prizes based on scientific ingenuity and presentation quality. This experience from the IGP lends evidence to the feasibility of research-based learning in life sciences for high school youth beyond borders. Moving research-based learning upstream and internationally is well poised to advance 21st century life sciences from both interdisciplinary and intergenerational standpoints. The historic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic suggests that youth engagement in research-based learning and innovation in life sciences is timely.

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