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A New Hybrid Laboratory Course Christens A Pipeline Of Biology Students From Alabama State University To The University Of South Florida

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Conference

2007 Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Honolulu, Hawaii

Publication Date

June 24, 2007

Start Date

June 24, 2007

End Date

June 27, 2007

ISSN

2153-5965

Conference Session

Special programs and activities for minorities in engineering

Tagged Division

Minorities in Engineering

Page Count

16

Page Numbers

12.78.1 - 12.78.16

DOI

10.18260/1-2--2814

Permanent URL

https://strategy.asee.org/2814

Download Count

399

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Paper Authors

biography

Peter Stroot University of South Florida

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Assistant Professor
Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering

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biography

Bernard Batson University of South Florida

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Mr. Bernard Batson has experience in higher education in the implementation of student peer mentoring programs, fellowship application workshops, retention programs, and the graduate school admissions process for students from underrepresented groups. He is the Program Manager of the NSF IGERT, NSF Bridge to the Doctorate, and Alfred P. Sloan Minority Ph.D. Programs at USF. Since Fall 2004, he has recruited over seventy Black and Hispanic graduate students in STEM areas of study to USF, and mentored them with fellowship and internship opportunities.

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biography

BK Robertson Alabama State University

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Associate Professor of Environmental Microbiology and Toxicology
Dept. of Biological Sciences

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Abstract
NOTE: The first page of text has been automatically extracted and included below in lieu of an abstract

Title of the Paper: A New Hybrid Laboratory Course Christens a Pipeline of Biology Students from Alabama State University to the University of South Florida

Abstract

The University of South Florida (USF) has partnered with Alabama State University (ASU), an HBCU institution, to initiate a new pipeline between the schools that has the potential to increase the number of ASU biology graduates enrolling in engineering graduate programs. This new pipeline will be christened by a new hybrid laboratory course in the spring of 2006 that exposes ASU students to the use of molecular biology based methods in engineering. This USF course was developed through an NSF-CCLI grant and offered to USF students in the spring of 20051-3. For the planned hybrid course, the lecture portion of the course will be broadcast live through the internet for ASU students. The lecture will be the responsibility of the USF faculty member, while the laboratory section will be provided locally to ASU students by an ASU faculty member. To prepare for this hybrid course, the USF hosted the ASU faculty member for a “crash course” on the laboratory techniques. With this model course in place, the USF College of Engineering faculty and ASU faculty partners will expand this pipeline by offering additional hybrid courses that share the biotechnology theme. With this pipeline in place, the USF and ASU faculty expect to expand this collaboration into a national model involving students from both institutions, and eventually additional students from other minority-serving institutions and community colleges.

Introduction

Based on the current trends and future needs of the United States, the National Science Foundation (NSF) has established goals to improve the research abilities and education of scientists and engineers4. The NSF has identified the need for more engineers and scientists with training in the growing fields of nanotechnology and biotechnology. To facilitate this training, the NSF is pursuing two new research priority areas, “Nanoscale Science & Engineering” and “Biocomplexity in the Environment”, both of which offer opportunities to advance our scientific knowledge base through discovery.

The demand for more engineers in the United States is expected to increase by 9.4% from 2000 to 20104. Over the next two decades, massive retirements will further increase this demand. For 2002, a survey of undergraduate students enrolled in an engineering program found that 18.4% were female, 6.6% were African-American, and 8.4% Hispanic, which are below the 2001 populations levels for 18-24 years old (14.0% African-American and 17.4% Hispanic). By 2050, the percentage of Americans between 18-24 years old is expected to remain at 14% for African- Americans, but the percentage of Hispanics is expected to increase to 30%. These demographic figures and projections suggest that this demand for engineers can be met by a using a comprehensive strategy that increases the number of engineers coming from three large, historically underrepresented groups: females, African-Americans, and Hispanics5.

Stroot, P., & Batson, B., & Robertson, B. (2007, June), A New Hybrid Laboratory Course Christens A Pipeline Of Biology Students From Alabama State University To The University Of South Florida Paper presented at 2007 Annual Conference & Exposition, Honolulu, Hawaii. 10.18260/1-2--2814

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