Abstract

Governmental and educational organizations advocate for the adoption of inquiry-based, student-centered educational strategies in undergraduate STEM curricula. These strategies are known to benefit students by increasing performance, enhancing mastery of class content, and augmenting affect, particularly in underrepresented racial/ethnic minority students. Among these strategies, case study and project-based learning allow students to master course content while collectively tackling relevant, real-world societal problems. In particular, environmental pollution with paper-based products provide a current problem by which microbiology students learn about the role of microorganisms in paper waste management as well as the microbiological and biochemical processes involved in protein secretion, nutrient uptake, and energy metabolism. Delivered in a flipped, hybrid class in a Technology-Enabled Active Learning (TEAL) laboratory, this lesson taught students about exoenzyme secretion, biopolymer hydrolysis, intracellular transport of sugars, and sugar catabolic reactions. Students demonstrated increased comprehension of exoenzyme function and secretion, as well as how cells uptake the products of exoenzyme hydrolysis. However, students had challenges in placing the transported exoenzyme products within metabolic processes. Our results show increased perceived learning from the students as well as an understanding of the societal implications of these microbiological concepts. Our lesson deviated from knowledge silos in which students learn information in discrete topics. While departing from employing traditional, compartmentalized learning approaches, this student-centered guided lesson frames the systemic nature of the microbiological and biochemical processes underlying the decomposition of organic matter in a real-world context.

Highlights

  • Institutions and faculty are revolutionizing their science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) educational programs to effectively engage and train tomorrow’s scientists (AAAS, 2009)

  • General Microbiology utilizes project-based learning in the Technology-Enabled Active Learning (TEAL) classroom environment to facilitate the exploration of real-world scenarios (Dourmashkin et al, 2020) and help students synthesize their own understanding of material (Leupen, 2020)

  • Students demonstrated their learning by building their own systems-level understanding of the microbiological and biochemical processes involved in the breakdown of paper

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Summary

Introduction

Institutions and faculty are revolutionizing their science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) educational programs to effectively engage and train tomorrow’s scientists (AAAS, 2009). Students need more than a traditional biology education to tackle the most pressing issues facing science and society; they need to learn how to address real-world problems. Microbiology Lesson on Paper Biodegradation in an experiential learning environment, students can build their own conceptual framework through an active learning process that encourages them to socially engage, share ideas, and participate in their own inquiry-based learning (Allen and Tanner, 2005; Chorazy and Klinedinst, 2019). Problem-based learning increases awareness and connects students to local challenges, which is instrumental in actively engaging them in their education, especially for underrepresented student populations (Nelson-Hurwitz and Buchthal, 2019). The use of deliberate pedagogy can increase awareness of paper waste pollution and emphasize how microbial degradation provides an alternative to paper waste management (Nelson-Hurwitz and Buchthal, 2019)

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