by faith rovenolt, cft undergraduate intern<\/em><\/p>\n
during spring 2020, the teaching innovations at vanderbilt blog series will highlight teaching innovations that cft staff have implemented and evaluated in their own courses. <\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
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brame teaches the second half of biochem, focusing on metabolism. this involves a lot of pathways, and brame finds that students can get lost in the details and become frustrated. the relevance of the material to their lives isn\u2019t always obvious, and they may not automatically know that metabolism is a highly dynamic, research-active area. to help students make those connections, brame created four graded homework assignments. for the first, brame gave students a paper to read, high-fructose corn syrup enhances intestinal tumor growth in mice<\/a>, and gave very general instructions<\/a> asking them to describe the mechanism outlined in the paper with supporting evidence from the text. i read the paper myself and, despite not taking the course, immediately recognized how relevant biochemistry still is\u2014and, not to spoil the paper too much, i\u2019ll never drink soda again. the other assignments were:<\/p>\n
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- a case study on the tylenol tampering deaths in 1982<\/li>\n
- connecting a news story<\/a> on a yearly epidemic of deaths among children in bihar, india, with a paper describing the discovery of the mechanism<\/li>\n
- exploring how the pathways taught in class change under starvation conditions<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
each of these assignments allowed students to discover the value of biochemistry for themselves in different ways. in a survey at the end of the course that about a third of the >150 students in the course filled out, the feedback was positive; many enjoyed reading the papers and seeing the connections to life outside of class. that said, some said they would have preferred homework that was more directly test prep. brame is thinking about how to make more clear how the homework helps students prepare for the exam\u2014and perhaps, how to make that link stronger.<\/p>\n
another new implementation in the course is a flipped classroom setup for a few topics that students often struggle with. before class, brame gave students prep sheets (here<\/a> and here<\/a>) to guide their textbook reading\u2014as we all know, textbooks can be quite dense\u2014and had them watch a molecular model animation to illustrate the concepts in action. in class, brame replaced her typical interactive lecture (that includes discussion and question time) with students reviewing the material and their answers together in groups before moving on to application questions that let students explore the implications of the basic information the prep had given them.<\/p>\n