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Education

Craig, O’Handley win grant to start research-based courses at 50 more campuses

Luke Auburn
By Luke Auburn
Feb. 3, 2023

The National Science Foundation is funding a project led by Rochester Institute of Technology scientists that will help students across the country benefit from hands-on learning experiences in biochemistry courses. The to further implement and assess a course-based undergraduate research experience (CURE) based on the Biochemistry Authentic Science Inquiry Laboratory (BASIL) project led by RIT.

The BASIL CURE launched eight years ago based on the principle that students learn most effectively by doing rather than simply watching and listening. In the course, students use computational methods to try to predict the function of a protein based on its structure and then use wet laboratory methods to try to confirm their hypotheses.

“Research has shown that getting undergraduate students involved in research activities can greatly improve retention, completion rates, and other factors,” said , a professor in the and principal investigator of the grant. “But it’s pretty clear that most campuses simply don’t have enough faculty or lab space to have every student have an individual research experience with a professor. The BASIL CURE is a lower-cost model that can be implemented with one professor and 12 to 15 students who are still doing research and getting many of the same benefits as the traditional one-on-one experiences.”

Paul Craig, left, working with faculty at a BASIL CURE workshop to help implement the research-based biochemistry curriculum more broadly across the country.
Rebecca Roberts at Rochester Institute of Technology
Paul Craig, second from left, works with faculty at a BASIL CURE workshop to help implement the research-based biochemistry curriculum more broadly across the country.

So far, the BASIL CURE has been fully implemented on 10 campuses across the country and been explored or some of the modules have been adopted at 25 others. One of the major goals of the new new NSF funding is to add 50 more campuses to the project over the next five years through a series of recruiting and training workshops and a mentoring program. Craig said the team will be intentional about diversifying the type of schools they engage with and that they intend for at least 30% of the new campuses to be historically Black colleges and universities, tribal colleges and other minority-serving institutions.

Craig, co-PI associate professor  and collaborators from across the country will survey and interview participating faculty to identify barriers to adoption and other ways to improve upon the course. The project leaders anticipate providing support to participating faculty through a variety of training and workshops, including the  program led by researchers from RIT’s .

For more information about the project, go to the .

This article was first published by the Rochester Institute of Technology.

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Luke Auburn
Luke Auburn

Luke Auburn is a senior communications specialist at Rochester Institute of Technology.

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