Abstract

ABSTRACTQuantitative reasoning (QR) skills have become a critical competency for undergraduate biology students, and recommendations for curricular reform urge QR training throughout undergraduate biology programs. Much research has been directed at course design, pedagogy, and student challenges in QR, but less research has been directed toward understanding how biology faculty conceptualize the QR skills they are called upon to teach. We conducted in-depth, semistructured interviews with 15 participants teaching introductory biology courses to learn how faculty conceptualize QR at the introductory level. Using phenomenology, responses were coded to establish inductive codes. We found that two themes emerged from the coded conceptualizations: sophisticated, cognitively complex QR skills and basic QR skills. Participants placed emphasis on the more complex QR skills as being important in the undergraduate curriculum, beginning at the introductory level. Participants’ conceptualizations of QR aligned with skills called for in curriculum reform, but the perceived notion of “basic” for some skills may not align with the literature. This suggests that more is needed in aligning faculty conceptualization of QR with curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment.

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