• HOME
  • GETTING STARTED
    • Quick Start Guide
    • Evaluation Software
    • Webinars 2025
    • Demo Videos
  • OUR PRODUCTS
    • All SimBio Modules
    • Textbook Replacements
      • SimBio Ecology
      • Intro Bio
    • Intro Bio
    • Ecology
    • Evolution
    • Cell Biology
    • Molecular Biology
  • DELIVERY SYSTEM
    • What is SimUText?
  • PRICING & ORDERING
  • ABOUT
    • Overview
    • Employee Ownership
    • Research & Publications
    • Blog
    • Testimonials
    • Jobs
    • Accessibility
  • TECH SUPPORT
    • Knowledge Base
    • Help for Students
    • FAQ – Instructors
    • Accessibility

Mobile Menu

  • Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

SimBio logo

Simulated Biology. Real Learning.

  • Evaluation Software
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • HOME
  • GETTING STARTED
    • Quick Start Guide
    • Evaluation Software
    • Webinars 2025
    • Demo Videos
  • OUR PRODUCTS
    • All SimBio Modules
    • Textbook Replacements
      • SimBio Ecology
      • Intro Bio
    • Intro Bio
    • Ecology
    • Evolution
    • Cell Biology
    • Molecular Biology
  • DELIVERY SYSTEM
    • What is SimUText?
  • PRICING & ORDERING
  • ABOUT
    • Overview
    • Employee Ownership
    • Research & Publications
    • Blog
    • Testimonials
    • Jobs
    • Accessibility
  • TECH SUPPORT
    • Knowledge Base
    • Help for Students
    • FAQ – Instructors
    • Accessibility

Cool Projects at NSF’s CCLI Meeting

Home » All Things SimBio » Cool Projects at NSF’s CCLI Meeting

September 4, 2008 //  by Eli Meir

Three weeks ago now (swish, there goes the time) I was at the CCLI conference sponsored by NSF for projects that have received funding from their division of undergraduate education. We were there showing results from our EvoBeaker studies and our plans under our current Phase II EvoBeaker project. Our poster was of course showing some pretty cool results and labs (I say so myself) and there was a ton of other really interesting work being presented as well. Here’s my round-up, a somewhat random collection of some posters where I had a good talk with the authors.

I naturally gravitated towards some of the technology-based projects, or projects around assessment, since that’s our focus at SimBiotic, but a couple of fun wet lab projects grabbed my attention too. Larry Blumer at Morehouse College is developing a whole curriculum using bean beetles, where you can apparently do all kinds of experiments in ecology and evolution. I like beans, and beetles, and the pictures of beetles astride their beans sure look cute. Carolyn Thomas at Ferrum College and a bunch of her colleagues have put together a consortium of a number of small teaching colleges in the Appalachians into a watershed collaboration called CAWS. Students in ecology-related classes in each of those schools gather data on some aspect of a watershed near their school, and then all the data from all the classes are put onto a central server from which all participants can access it. So students at each school get a wide range of data, beyond that which they can collect themselves. Together with a bunch of teaching materials they’ve developed for the project, it sounds like a fun and powerful way to learn how to do science.

One of my objectives for the meeting was to look for resources for assessing student learning. In addition to a session on assessment (see my last post), Michael Klymkowsky from University of Colorado, Boulder was presenting results from the biological concept inventory he is developing using both low tech (student interviews) and some higher tech analysis software run on student essays. A really nice approach. One thing we’re trying now from his methods is to have students explain some biological topic to a non-expert interviewer. I’m hopeful that putting the student in the place of authority will pull out some hidden misconceptions. Another interesting assessment I saw was done by Denise Woodward from Penn State University on how well some web-based animations she helped write worked for teaching biology. Her group compared students who sat through a traditional lecture to those that used an animation. The learning gains were the same, suggesting that just making an animation of a complex process is not enough to increase student learning. Kathleen Dixon from the University of Arizona was looking for student misconceptions in quantitative concepts in cell biology, starting with diffusion and osmosis among other things. She was finding some of the same problems in her students that we found in our study which led to our OsmoBeaker labs.

There were a bunch of other great posters, it’s really a nice NSF program as far as producing innovative teaching ideas, but one last poster by Heidi Elmendorf from Georgetown was a more retro idea – having students learn by teaching. She was offering students the opportunity to develop a set of biology teaching materials and then use them in a class in the DC school system as a senior capstone project. Her assessment was all qualitative, but it sounded like a wonderful program all around. She had quotes from senior biology students saying that the first time they really understood some fundamental concept (I think mitosis and meiosis were in some quotes, things like that) was when they had to teach it. Some even found developing educational labs was a better way of understanding how to do research than their experiences working in a research lab.

– Eli Meir, SimBio founder and author

Author

  • Eli Meir
    Eli Meir

    SimBio founder Eli Meir brings together a PhD in biology, a long history of developing sophisticated software for both biology research and education markets, and over 20 years of experience running software companies. He has a passion for using these skills to improve education in both college and secondary schools through innovative products that let students learn by doing and playing.

    View all posts

Category: SimBio

Related Posts

An Undergraduate Intern’s Summer at SimBio

Mitosis Explored – SimBio’s new tutorial

Male Antelope Lie To Get Sex

Octopus Aces Physics Homework

Survival of the Fittest? Not Always.

E-Textbooks and the Blind

Language, Lying, and Evolution

Is a picture worth 1,000 words?

Genomic Analysis of Identical Twins Finds Few Differences

Better Gene Discovery Through Evolutionary Reasoning

SimUText Ecology

The Talented Dr. Fox, Part 2

Next Post: Group Theory »

Footer

Testimonials

“[SimBio’s modules] provide a powerful environment for hands-on, active learning in Ecology and Evolution. The depth, design, and pedagogical effectiveness of these packages is unequaled. They have greatly enriched student interest and understanding in all of my courses, from Introductory Biology to Advanced Population Biology”

— Dr. Brad Lister
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

“The lab simulations have been very helpful to reinforce the lecture content and encourage students to use critical thinking skills to solve problems.”

— Patti Fallest-Strobl
Neumann University

“I was amazed how quickly and effortlessly the simulation taught them a dynamic system.”

— Paula Philbrick
University of Connecticut

“The students like [it] so much that they are working ahead of what I have assigned. They just think it’s fun. And from the quiz results I have so far, they’re really getting it. You guys are geniuses.”

— Paulette Bierzychudek
Lewis & Clark College

“Since we began using Simbio’s Ecology chapters our students consistently come to class better prepared. This is a key to the success of our hybrid flipped classroom approach.”

— Dr. Peter Curtis
Ohio State University

“That was the most fun I’ve had teaching ecology and, I would venture to guess, the most fun my students have had taking ecology from me.”

— Matt Orr
Oregon State University, Cascades

“Our students are more prepared and our class discussions are more sophisticated because SimUText is such a great out of class “instructor”. Since our students have SimUText preparation we can spend class time applying concepts and evaluating new information.”

— Emily Bernhardt
Duke University

“I LOVE that every lab is based on a real study. I LOVE that all of the labs offer an open-ended inquiry. I LOVE that the labs gradually teach the concepts and build up a repertoire of data collection techniques. Thank you, for creating them.”

— Jeanette Williams
Community College of Vermont

“I just wanted to say how great simutext has been. I could have memorized facts about the electron transport chain and passed the test, but would not have had any solid concept of what was happening inside. I hope that we continue to use it often even when things return to normal.”

— Student
Rochester Community and Technical College

“Congratulations for developing such a high quality chapter. I was very impressed by its comprehensiveness, accuracy, and thoughtful design. It really is superb.”

— Richard Boone
Humboldt State University

“I recommend your modules to anyone I can, because of all the online materials I’ve found, SimBio is really the best in content and best managed. I am definitely a SimBio fan!”

— Valerie Anderson
Marymount California University

All Things SimBio

  • Jaz DonkohIn-class learning or homework?
    By Jaz Donkoh
    September 18, 2024
  • John RoachSimBio Ecology – Comprehensive ecology education
    By John Roach
    July 18, 2024
  • John RoachRisk, Insurance, & Climate Policy
    By John Roach
    June 21, 2024
More Blog Posts →

Contact

Shipping: 1280 S. Third St W., Missoula, MT 59801
Billing: P.O. Box 7158, Missoula, MT 59807
Phone: (833) 314-7701
Fax: (617) 279-0055
Questions?

SimBio Order Form
VPAT / Accessibility Statement

Site Footer

  • Facebook

Copyright © 2025 SimBio. All Rights Reserved. Trademarks.