AI Article Synopsis

  • - The article compares a one-semester undergraduate biochemistry lab course taught either fully online or in-person, focusing on student outcomes and perceptions.
  • - Students in the in-person group reported greater enjoyment and found the course less time-consuming compared to their online counterparts, while most participating instructors also preferred the in-person format for its effectiveness and engaging nature.
  • - Despite similar assessment scores between both groups, the study's limited sample size raises questions about the broader applicability of its findings.

Article Abstract

This article compares the learning outcomes and student perceptions of a one semester undergraduate biochemistry laboratory course that was taught using either a fully online or a fully in-person teaching modality. The semester long biochemistry laboratory mimicked the work sequence a researcher would encounter when transforming a plasmid containing a gene for a recombinant protein (superfolder green fluorescent protein, sf-GFP) and then purifying, identifying, and characterizing that protein. The two modalities of the course were completed in the same semester, by the same instructor, in which students self-selected into which modality they preferred at the beginning of the semester. Students in the in-person section reported enjoying the laboratory course more than the online cohort of students and found it to be less time-consuming. Additionally, a survey of biochemistry laboratory instructors from across the United States, who had experience teaching both online and in-person biochemistry laboratories, indicated that the majority of instructors that responded to the survey preferred the in-person modality: believing them to be more effective and engaging for the students, more enjoyable, and less time-consuming for the instructor. Statistical analysis of formative and summative assessments indicated no significant difference in non-hands-on student learning objective and learning goal scores between the two groups, but the small number of students and instructors in this study limits the generalizability of these results.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10938634PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.3c00571DOI Listing

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