Autor: |
DeJarnette, Anna F., Rollmann, Stephanie M., Vanderelst, Dieter F., Layne, John E., Hutchinson, Anna |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of College Science Teaching; Mar/Apr2024, Vol. 53 Issue 2, p140-146, 7p |
Abstrakt: |
Transdisciplinary learning—where students develop and apply knowledge from multiple disciplines to solve open-ended problems—is necessary to prepare students for the most pressing real-world problems. Because transdisciplinary education often requires reimagining the content and design of undergraduate science courses, it can be a challenge for instructors to envision how such work might take place. In this article, we share an example of an undergraduate course developed at the intersection of animal sensory biology and robotics engineering. Students in the course developed knowledge from both disciplines to design a robot that could mimic the sensory behaviors of some animals to achieve a predetermined task. We share examples of students' work in the course and evidence of how students' perceptions of science and engineering changed throughout their participation in the course. Additionally, we describe how we adapted a hybrid model of collaboration that made it feasible for students to work together on an open-ended project requiring access to robotics equipment during the COVID-19 pandemic. This course can serve as a model for instructors working to incorporate more interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary perspectives into existing science courses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
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