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Teaching Evolution Using Case Studies. Understanding and Teaching Evolution | Jamaica| November, 2013. What are case studies? Why use them? What are their limitations? Example ( “ Case Studies: A Case Study ” ) Resources and Links. What Are Case Studies?.
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Teaching Evolution Using Case Studies Understanding and Teaching Evolution | Jamaica| November, 2013
What are case studies? • Why use them? • What are their limitations? • Example (“Case Studies: A Case Study”) • Resources and Links
What Are Case Studies? • “A story with a message” – CF Herreid (JCST, Feb. 94) • A brief, real-world scenario, followed by questions, exercises, activities • Many different formats, variations • Used for decades in law schools, business schools, medical schools • Usage in science classrooms increased dramatically in the 90s
Why Use Case Studies? • Less didactic, more engaging, student-active approach • Emphasizes critical analysis, reasoning, higher-order thinking • Promotes student interaction, builds communication skills • Typically focuses on student-relevant, real-world situations • Goal is not typically to teach content, although data show that learning/retention of content using this method can equal or exceed traditional (Socratic) methods
Limitations of Case Studies • Not necessarily the best method for conveying/teaching large amounts of facts or information (debatable?) • Can be challenging (although not impossible) in large lecture settings • Student reluctance • Issues associated with group dynamics • Instructor skill/ability with method is critical
A Mini Case Study Mark is the starting point fielder and team captain of his school cricket team. His team is playing for the championship title in a couple days. He also has two midterm exams next week, his girlfriend just dumped him and he just found out that his parents are getting divorced. On top of all this, he’s starting to feel under the weather, so he visits the school nurse.
A Mini Case Study (cont.) The nurse explains that his immune system, and in fact all vertebrate immune systems, rely on chemicals called cytokines to function properly. Stress is known to produce chemicals called corticosteroids, which slow down or stop the production of cytokines. Consequently, stress makes him more susceptible to infections and illness.
A Mini Case Study (cont.) “That just doesn’t seem fair!”, laments Mark. “The last thing in the world I need right now, when I’m already so stressed out, is to get sick! Why does this happen?!?”
A Mini Case Study (cont.) QUESTIONS • What selective pressures might have led to the evolution of this trait in vertebrates? • Why do you think it has persisted in humans? • Predict what might happen in an individual born with a mutation that prevented normal, functional corticosteroid production. What might be the evolutionary implications of such a mutation?
“Extended” Case Studies www.dnadarwin.org
“Extended” Case Studies lbc.msu.edu/evo-ed
Resources and Links • DNA to Darwin – www.dnadarwin.org • Evo-Ed: Case Studies for Evolution - lbc.msu.edu/evo-ed • National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/projects/cases • BioQUEST Investigative Case Based Learning www.bioquest.org/icbl/publications.php • Understanding Evolution - evolution.berkeley.edu • Merlot – www.merlot.org • PBS Evolution: Teaching Evolution Case Studies www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/educators/teachstuds/ tvideos.html