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THE EDUCATION GROUP HAS TWO MAJOR GOALS 1. To train scientist-educators. 2. To develop tools and curriculum that improve the teaching of introductory biology.
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MOTIVATION FOR THE PROJECT For his entire career, Graham has "balanced on a tightrope" between devoting time to his research career and his efforts in undergraduate education. By bringing together a group of people interested in teaching and educational development, young scientists could receive training and support for their educational efforts, and mentoring on how to walk that tightrope. Also, as with a scientific group, the diversity of interests and talents could lead to a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. At MIT, like many other universities, large lectures are a reality in Introductory Biology courses. This format often makes it very challenging to present material in a manner that will give students the sense of discovery and excitement, like that experienced in advanced undergraduate labs or research. The group therefore focuses its curriculum development activities on creating teaching tools that help make biology come alive for the students in lecture courses.
Coverage in the MIT press
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WHO ARE THE MEMBERS OF THE EDUCATION GROUP AND WHAT DO WE DO? The Education Group consists of a wide variety of people with one common interest: improving undergraduate biology education. We are professors, post-doctoral fellows, graduate students, and undergraduates. Some of the members work full-time on multiple projects, some get involved in one or two projects of particular interest, and some members just attend Education Group meetings. Any level of involvement is an asset to the group. The Education Group meets approximately every three weeks and welcomes anyone in the Greater Boston area interested in thinking and talking about biology education. To find out when the next meeting will be, please contact Graham Walker at [email protected] More about Members of the Education Group More about Education Group Meetings
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"Founding this group has been one of the most stimulating things I have done in my professional career. I am overwhelmed by the excitement and intellectual energy it has generated. I have likened the experience to 'dropping a seed crystal into a saturated solution of education'."
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A PERSPECTIVE ON THE EXPERIMENT OF FOUNDING AN "EDUCATION GROUP" The funds provided with this award are enabling me to try experiments in education resembling those carried out my own research lab, which utilizes many techniques common to modern biological research. For the most part, these experiments involve an initial attempt, successive cycles of redesigning the experiment and testing its implications, and then ultimately repeating a final version that becomes the one published in the scientific literature. Formal evaluation is not needed for the majority of such day-to-day experiments since their success or failure is usually so obvious. Lots of ideas are tried and many are discarded during this process, just as they are in a research lab. It is my hope that the analogous cycles of redesign and intellectual progression that we are using in our educational research may lead to some novel and useful contributions that might not have emerged from the traditional approaches used in educational research.
Graham Walker's Laboratory Website
Graham Walker's HHMI Professor Website
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HHMI Education Group Activities, click to enlarge.
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