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Difference between revisions of "Using Scaffolding and Deliberate Practice to Improve Abstract Writing in an Introductory Biology Laboratory Course"

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Latest revision as of 10:09, 6 December 2024

Abstract

Abstracts play the pivotal role of selling an article to a prospective reader, and for students, the ability to communicate science in concise written form may foster scientific thinking. However, students struggle with abstract composition, and we lack evidence-based educational innovations to help them develop this skill. We designed, implemented, and assessed an intervention for abstract composition with elements of scaffolding and transparency to ask whether deliberate practice improves concise scientific writing in early career undergraduate biology majors. We evaluated student performance by analyzing abstracts written before and after the intervention and by assessing pre- and posttest student concept maps. We found that scaffolded learning improved student abstract writing, with the greatest gains in students’ ability to describe the motivation for their work. Using a set of tested tools to teach scientific writing has important implications for strengthening students’ capacity to reinforce and synthesize content in the future, whether that is in laboratory course exercises, in independent research, or as a transferable skill to general critical thinking.

Bibliographic data

Christian, Natalie, and Katherine D. Kearns. “Using Scaffolding and Deliberate Practice to Improve Abstract Writing in an Introductory Biology Laboratory Course.” Journal of microbiology & biology education 19.2 (2018).

External source

https://doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.v19i2.1564