新冠肺炎与味觉实验室:基于迷你课程的大学生味觉差异与新冠肺炎易感性研究体验

Robert J Wickham, Walter Adams, Morgan J Hawker
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摘要

传统的基于课程的本科生研究经验(CUREs)是让学生接触真实实验室实践的常见方法。传统疗法通常占据大部分或整个学期,需要一个实验室部分或可能是一个独立的实验课程,并且需要机构和教师投入大量的资金和时间。因此,在资源较少的机构中,cure更难实施。在这里,我们开发了一种迷你治疗,这种治疗通常持续时间较短,称为COVID-19和味觉实验室(CT-LAB)。与传统疗法相比,CT-LAB所需的资源(每名学生0.05美元)和时间(两节课时)明显更少。CT-LAB主要围绕COVID-19易感性与味觉状态(非味觉者、味觉者和超味觉者)之间的生物学关系以及对公共政策行为的潜在影响。学生们参加了一项全校范围的研究,在这项研究中,他们检查了味觉状况是否与COVID-19易感性有关。他们发现,与品尝师和超级品尝师相比,非品尝师之前的COVID-19检测呈阳性的可能性更高。为了评估学生的CURE结果,学生们完成了测试前和测试后的评估,包括内容测试、STEM身份调查、味觉测试、COVID-19历史测试和修改后的CURE调查。内容测试成绩有所提高,而STEM的身份和对科学的态度没有变化。与传统疗法存储库的直接比较表明,CT-LAB主要在与CT-LAB特别相关的技能方面产生了与传统疗法相当的好处。这项研究表明,即使是像两节课那么短的迷你疗法,也可能是提高学生成绩的一种方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The COVID-19 and Taste Lab: A Mini Course-Based Undergraduate Research Experience on Taste Differences and COVID-19 Susceptibility.

Traditional course-based undergraduate research experiences (CUREs) are common approaches to expose students to authentic laboratory practices. Traditional CUREs typically take up most of or an entire semester, require a laboratory section or may be a standalone lab course, and require significant financial and time commitments by the institution and instructors. As such, CUREs are harder to implement at institutions with fewer resources. Here, we developed a mini-CURE, which are typically shorter in duration, called the COVID-19 and Taste Lab (CT-LAB). The CT-LAB requires significantly fewer resources ($0.05/student) and time commitment (two class periods) than traditional CUREs. CT-LAB centers around the biological relationship between COVID-19 susceptibility and taste status (non-taster, taster, and supertaster) as well as potential implications for public policy behavior. Students participated in a class-wide study where they examined if taste status was related to COVID-19 susceptibility. They found that non-tasters had a higher likelihood of testing positive previously for COVID-19 compared to tasters and supertasters. To assess student outcomes of this CURE, students completed a pre- and post-test assessment including a content test, STEM identity survey, taste test, COVID-19 history test, and a modified CURE survey. Content test scores improved while STEM identity and attitudes about science were unchanged. A direct comparison to a repository of traditional CUREs shows that the CT-LAB produced comparable benefits to traditional CUREs primarily in skills that were particularly relevant for the CT-LAB. This work suggests that mini-CUREs, even as brief as two class periods, could be a way to improve student outcomes.

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