Abstract

Despite decades of reform efforts, STEM education continues to face calls for improvement, especially regarding the teaching laboratory. Establishing an empirical understanding of the types of hands-on, psychomotor skills that students need to learn to succeed in downstream careers could help ensure laboratory courses are promoting authentic learning. Therefore, this paper reports phenomenological grounded theory case studies characterizing the nature of benchwork in synthetic organic chemistry graduate research. Through first-person video data and retrospective interviews, the results illustrate how organic chemistry students use psychomotor skills to conduct doctoral research and where they acquired those skills. By understanding the role that psychomotor skills play in authentic benchwork and the role that teaching laboratories play in the development of those skills, chemical educators could revolutionize undergraduate laboratory experiences by enabling evidence-based incorporation of the psychomotor component into laboratory learning objectives.

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