Ecology and Evolution (Jun 2024)

Harnessing open science practices to teach ecology and evolutionary biology using interactive tutorials

  • Jory E. Griffith,
  • Elizabeth Houghton,
  • Margaret A. Slein,
  • Maxime Fraser Franco,
  • Jhoan Chávez,
  • Amy B. Forsythe,
  • Victoria M. Glynn,
  • Egor Katkov,
  • Kirsten M. Palmier,
  • Zihaohan Sang,
  • Rolando Trejo‐Pérez,
  • Bryn Wiley,
  • Jennifer M. Sunday,
  • Joey R. Bernhardt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11179
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Open science skills are increasingly important for a career in ecology and evolutionary biology (EEB) as efforts to make data and analyses publicly available continue to become more commonplace. While learning core concepts in EEB, students are also expected to gain skills in conducting open science to prepare for future careers. Core open science skills like programming, data sharing, and practices that promote reproducibility can be taught to undergraduate students alongside core concepts in EEB. Yet, these skills are not always taught in biology undergraduate programs, and a major challenge in developing open science skills and learning EEB concepts simultaneously is the high cognitive load associated with learning multiple disparate concepts at the same time. One solution is to provide students with easily digestible, scaffolded, pre‐formatted code in the form of vignettes and interactive tutorials. Here, we present six open source teaching tutorials for undergraduate students in EEB. These tutorials teach fundamental ecological concepts, data literacy, programming (using R software), and analysis skills using publicly available datasets while introducing students to open science concepts and tools. Spanning a variety of EEB topics and skill levels, these tutorials serve as examples and resources for educators to integrate open science tools, programming, and data literacy into teaching EEB at the undergraduate level.

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