Improving STEM Education in Research: Preliminary Report on the Development of a Computer-Assisted Student-Mentor Research Community
David Rios, Artem Chebotko, Christine Reilly, Ralph Carlson, Emmett Tomai, Amy A Weimer, Nicholas Weimer, Thomas Pearson, Francis Andoh-Baidoo, Robert Winkle, David Ammons, Joanne Rampersad
College of Social and Behavioral Sciences. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of Chemistry. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of Computer Information Systems and Quantitative Methods. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of Computer Science. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of Educational Psychology. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of History and Philosophy. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of Political Science. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
Dept. of Psychology. The University of Texas- Pan American, Edinburg, TX U.S.A.
DOI: 10.4236/ce.2012.35090   PDF    HTML     4,293 Downloads   6,834 Views   Citations

Abstract

Research education in STEM disciplines currently suffers from 1) The inability to feasibly collect highly detailed data on both the student’s and mentor’s activities; 2) The lack of tools to assist students and mentors in organizing and managing their research activities and environments; and 3) The inability to correlate a student’s assessment results with their actual research activities. Together these three problems act to impede both the improvement and educational quality of student research experiences. We propose a computer-assisted student-mentor research community as a solution to these problems. Within this community setting, students and their mentors are provided tools to make their work easier, much like a word processor makes writing a letter easier. Through their use of these tools, details of student-mentor activities are automatically recorded in a relational database, without burdening users with the responsibility of archiving data. Equally important, student assessments of outcome can be directly related to student activity, allowing educators to identify practices resulting in successful research experiences. Community tools also facilitate the use of labor-intensive teaching laboratories involving real inquiry-based research. The community structure has the added benefit of allowing students to see, communicate and interact more freely with other students and their projects, thus enriching the student’s research experience. We provide herein a preliminary report on the development and testing of a prototype, student-mentor research community, and present its tools, an assessment of student interest in participating in the community, and discuss its further development into a nationally-available student-mentor research community.

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Rios, D. , Chebotko, A. , Reilly, C. , Carlson, R. , Tomai, E. , Weimer, A. , Weimer, N. , Pearson, T. , Andoh-Baidoo, F. , Winkle, R. , Ammons, D. & Rampersad, J. (2012). Improving STEM Education in Research: Preliminary Report on the Development of a Computer-Assisted Student-Mentor Research Community. Creative Education, 3, 612-618. doi: 10.4236/ce.2012.35090.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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