TY - JOUR
T1 - Bee The CURE
T2 - Increasing Student Science Self-Efficacy, Science Identity, and Predictors of Scientific Civic Engagement in a Community College CURE
AU - Dunbar-Wallis, Amy K.
AU - Katcher, Jennifer
AU - Moore, Wendy
AU - Corwin, Lisa A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 A. K. Dunbar-Wallis et al and 2024 The American Society for Cell Biology.
PY - 2024/12/1
Y1 - 2024/12/1
N2 - “Bee the CURE” is a Power-of-Place course-based undergraduate research experience (PoP-CUREs; Jaeger et al., 2024) that combines place-based education (Demarest, 2014; Gruenewald, 2014) with CUREs, emphasizing student scientific civic engagementwhere research is relevant to the community where the research is taking place. PoP-CUREs have potential to build students’ knowledge, skills, value, and self-efficacy when engaging with the public using science skills (i.e., scientific civic engagement). A mixedmethods sequential explanatory design utilizing surveys and semistructured interviews was used for this study (Warfa, 2016). Students made gains in science self-efficacy over the course of the semester and showed a trend of increasing science identity in both Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 semesters. Students’ scientific civic knowledge, or a student’s sense of how to use or apply knowledge and skills to help a community, increased significantly, while other predictors of scientific civic engagement started high and remained high throughout the course. Bee the CURE demonstrates psychosocial outcomes that are similar to previously studied CUREs and expands our understanding of how PoP-CUREs might influence outcomes with evidence that an important predictor of future scientific civic engagement increases. Implications for PoP-CURE instruction at Hispanic serving community colleges are discussed.
AB - “Bee the CURE” is a Power-of-Place course-based undergraduate research experience (PoP-CUREs; Jaeger et al., 2024) that combines place-based education (Demarest, 2014; Gruenewald, 2014) with CUREs, emphasizing student scientific civic engagementwhere research is relevant to the community where the research is taking place. PoP-CUREs have potential to build students’ knowledge, skills, value, and self-efficacy when engaging with the public using science skills (i.e., scientific civic engagement). A mixedmethods sequential explanatory design utilizing surveys and semistructured interviews was used for this study (Warfa, 2016). Students made gains in science self-efficacy over the course of the semester and showed a trend of increasing science identity in both Fall 2021 and Spring 2022 semesters. Students’ scientific civic knowledge, or a student’s sense of how to use or apply knowledge and skills to help a community, increased significantly, while other predictors of scientific civic engagement started high and remained high throughout the course. Bee the CURE demonstrates psychosocial outcomes that are similar to previously studied CUREs and expands our understanding of how PoP-CUREs might influence outcomes with evidence that an important predictor of future scientific civic engagement increases. Implications for PoP-CURE instruction at Hispanic serving community colleges are discussed.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85204941104&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85204941104&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1187/cbe.24-01-0015
DO - 10.1187/cbe.24-01-0015
M3 - Article
C2 - 39324986
AN - SCOPUS:85204941104
SN - 1931-7913
VL - 23
JO - CBE life sciences education
JF - CBE life sciences education
IS - 4
M1 - ar46
ER -