CADRE Center to Study the Use of Concept Inventories in Genetics and STEM Education

°Õ³ó±šĢżĀ has awarded a $300,000 grant to CU-91PORN School of Education ProfessorĀ Ā and CU Denver School of Education & Human Development ProfessorĀ , and CU-91PORN Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology (MCDB) InstructorĀ Ā to study the usefulness of popular āconcept inventoriesā as assessments of undergraduate student learning.
āConcept inventories are used to assess studentsā understanding of big picture ideas in the sciences, mathematics and engineering,ā Talbot explained. āResearch on these inventories, specifically their validity, has not kept pace with the rapid growth of their use in the STEM fields. This grant affords us the opportunity to conduct systematic and timely work using an existing high quality concept inventory from a very important field within STEMāGenetics.ā
This project will examine the relationship between student performance on the Genetics Concept Assessmentāa rigorously developed concept inventoryārelative to performance on newly developed open-response items and to instructor-developed final exams.
āThis is a unique opportunity for biologists to collaborate with education specialists to scrutinize what different kinds of assessments can tell us about student learning,ā Knight said. āBiology professors are on the brink of major changes in how introductory students are taught. These kinds of projects help bring faculty from different disciplines together to ultimately improve undergraduate student learning.ā
The project will be conducted through theĀ Ā (CADRE), directed by Professor Briggs and housed in the School of Education.
āThis study of concept inventories provides a unique opportunity to find out how well professors are able to capture evidence of student learning when they write a final exam. Weāre going to be doing a lot of work to figure out if there are important principles to follow when writing assessments that provide rich information about a studentās depth of conceptual understanding,ā Briggs said.
Through this 2-year project, Briggs, Talbot and Knight aim to help instructors think about the quality of their assessment items and to inform the development and validation of new concept inventories across all disciplines.