Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education (Mar 2021)

“Zoom”ing Our Way through Virtual Undergraduate Research Training: A Successful Redesign of the CONSERVE Summer Internship Program

  • Leena Malayil,
  • Masoud Negahban-Azar,
  • Rachel Goldstein,
  • Manan Sharma,
  • Jeanne Gleason,
  • Amy Muise,
  • Rianna Murray,
  • Amy Sapkota

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.v22i1.2625
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic has had an enormous impact on education globally, forcing the teaching community to think outside the box and create innovative educational plans to benefit students at home. Here, we narrate how the undergraduate, laboratory-based Summer Internship Program of our CONSERVE Center of Excellence, which focuses heavily on engaging women and underrepresented minorities in STEM programming, took a turn from an in-person research experience to a fully virtual one. We share our challenges and how we overcame them. Additionally, we provide a description of our virtual internship professional development curriculum, as well as the creative research projects that our seven interns were able to achieve in an 8-week virtual internship, including projects focused on the microbiological water quality of recycled irrigation water; social media promotion, enhancement and marketing of online educational resources focused on water, microbial contamination, and food crop irrigation; decision support systems for using recycled water in agricultural settings; and the effectiveness of zero-valent iron sand filtration in improving agricultural water quality, to name a few. Upon evaluating our internship program, we observed that more than 80% of our interns were either very satisfied or satisfied with the overall virtual internship experience. Through this experience, both the educators and the interns learned that although a virtual laboratory internship cannot completely replace in-person learning, it can still result in a very meaningful educational experience.