Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (Jun 2013)

A Project-Centric Course on Cyberinfrastructure to Support High School STEM Education

  • Daphne Rainey,
  • Lisa Coyne,
  • Jason Gibson,
  • Stephen Cammer,
  • Julie Schulman,
  • Betsy Tretola,
  • Oswald Crasta

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
pp. 8 – 13

Abstract

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Recent rapid advances in information technology pose new challenges for teachers in the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields to incorporate the latest knowledge and technical expertise into courses in a way that will be applicable to students as future scientists. A demonstration project was designed, developed, and deployed by university faculty and high school teachers for their students to explore the use of the components of cyberinfrastructure. The project explored the introduction of cyberinfrastructure through the use of bioinformatics and the use of team science. This paper describes the high school course that was deployed at Galileo Magnet High School (GMHS) in collaboration with the scientists at Virginia Tech University, and details its overall assessment. Implementation of a project-centric teaching paradigm to engage students in applying the concepts of cyberinfrastructure by integrating the disciplines of biology, computer science, mathematics, and statistics through bioinformatics was an integral part of this study.

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