Let's talk posters: a novel role-playing activity to prepare undergraduate researchers for poster presentations.

IF 1.6 Q2 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Meghan Dillon, Julia Gerstman, Alexandria Scarcella, Meghan Mantz, Courtney Kleeschulte, Caitlin J Light
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Calls to increase undergraduate involvement in research have led to a significant increase in student participation via course-based undergraduate research experiences (CUREs). These CUREs provide students an authentic research experience, which often involves dissemination of research by public speaking. For instance, the First-year Research Immersion (FRI) program at Binghamton University is a three-semester CURE sequence that prepares students for scientific research and effective communication of their findings. After one semester of research, students from the FRI program are tasked with presenting their research to hundreds of faculty members, staff, friends, and family at the annual FRI poster session. However, our students, and undergraduates in general, report high anxiety and fear around public speaking such as this. To better prepare our students for public speaking at a research poster session, we developed a workshop that includes a novel role-play activity to mimic a fast-paced poster session or conference in order to address students' fears and increase confidence levels. The role-play activity gives students iterative practice such that they are prepared for the realities of a poster session including variation of poster attendees. During the activity, students switch roles between presenter and audience member. In the role of an audience member, students are given Pokèmon-like role-playing cards that explain the traits and abilities of various types of poster-goers that students might come across (faculty in and out of discipline, staff, family, friends, etc.). Students improvise and enact their card-assigned role as they engage with their classmates who are practicing their poster presentations. To assess student outcomes, students were given three surveys: pre-activity, post-activity, and post-poster presentation. Immediately following the activity, 64% of students reported the highest level of confidence, and following the poster session, 93% of students reported extreme confidence in their poster presentation abilities. These data show that this role-play activity can help address student confidence and better prepare students to communicate their research.

让我们来谈谈海报:为本科研究人员准备海报展示的新颖角色扮演活动。
关于提高本科生参与研究的呼声,使得通过基于课程的本科生研究体验(CURE)参与研究的学生人数大幅增加。这些 CURE 为学生提供了真实的研究体验,通常包括通过公开演讲传播研究成果。例如,宾汉姆顿大学的一年级研究沉浸(FRI)项目是一个为期三个学期的 CURE 序列,旨在帮助学生为科学研究和有效交流研究成果做好准备。经过一个学期的研究,FRI 项目的学生要在 FRI 年度海报展示会上向数百名教职员工、朋友和家人展示他们的研究成果。然而,我们的学生和一般的本科生都对这样的公开演讲感到焦虑和恐惧。为了让学生更好地为在研究海报会议上的公开演讲做好准备,我们开发了一个工作坊,其中包括一个新颖的角色扮演活动,模拟快节奏的海报会议或大会,以消除学生的恐惧心理,增强他们的自信心。角色扮演活动为学生提供了反复练习的机会,使他们能够应对海报会议的实际情况,包括海报参与者的变化。在活动中,学生会在主持人和观众之间转换角色。在扮演观众时,学生会得到类似神奇宝贝的角色扮演卡片,卡片上说明了学生可能遇到的各种类型的海报观众(学科内外的教师、员工、家人、朋友等)的特征和能力。学生在与正在练习海报展示的同学互动时,即兴扮演并演绎卡片上指定的角色。为了评估学生的成果,对学生进行了三次调查:活动前、活动后和海报展示后。活动结束后,64% 的学生表示自信心达到了最高水平;海报展示后,93% 的学生表示对自己的海报展示能力非常自信。这些数据表明,这种角色扮演活动有助于解决学生的自信心问题,让学生为交流研究成果做好更好的准备。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
26.30%
发文量
95
审稿时长
22 weeks
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