![]() ![]() Students work on these questions in groups, but they do not finish the activities during class due to time constrains. This all takes approximately 2/3 of the class time.The last 1/3 of the class is dedicated to the in-class activities posted on Moodle (The activities are on Natural Selection, Population Genetics and Speciation, covered in class 4, 5 and 6 respectively). Students are allowed to ask the instructor questions during the discussion period, even though they seldom do. The instructor also interrupts the lecture with MCQs that students discuss and answer in groups using iclickers. These questions are used within the lecture to discuss any misconception and illustrate how concepts apply to the questions. Students also attempt 10 pre-class multiple-choice questions on Moodle (7-8 questions are simple recall/understanding questions, while the remaining are application/analysis questions).In class, the instructor covers (using powerpoint slides) key concepts, placing great emphasis on the areas students struggle with the most (based on the pre-class MCQs). Students rely on the textbook, lecture slides, YouTube videos, Moodle videos and concept maps (in any order) to prepare for this module. In this module, Flipped-Classroom along with Just in Time Teaching strategies are utilized. In classes 4-6, Module 4 (Evolution) is covered in the remaining three classes (classes 4-6) in week 8-9 of the course.In class, students watch a truncated version of a documentary on 'Mouse Coat Colour' at the beginning of the class, which can be accessed on: (Students can watch the full version only after class 4, which covers Natural Selection, as the video ties concepts in genetics and natural selection together.Therefore, watching the video before class 4 would be a ""spoiler."" The full 10-minute documentary can be accessed on. In class 3, (Genetics Module, covered in week 7), students unveil the mechanism by which the gene functions.In class 2 (Cells and Cell Division module), which is covered just before the unit test, students investigate the cellular aspects of producing the pigment of interest. ![]() ![]() In class 1 (Biological Chemistry Module) takes place in week 5 of the semester, where students have to determine the type of the molecule in question.Students will not have the time to finish the questions during the class time, so they will be given the answers and are encouraged to work on them on their own and ask questions if they have any. The questions are presented as short and long answer style. In the classroom, students work in groups to answer series of questions that cover different aspects in the case study. Each module is based on the preceding one, which helps students grasp how these different aspects in Biology tie together and to see the big picture. Students prepare for these modules by studying the relevant chapters before entering to the classroom. The three review modules utilize Just in Time Teaching strategy. This interrupted case study is covered in six classes that span over a period of 4-5 weeks, where the first three classes are review modules that serve as a basis for the core of the case study that is mainly covered in the latter three classes. Students try to link molecular mechanics and genetics to phenotype changes in Pocket Mice, and how these traits play an instrumental role in defining natural selection, population genetics, and speciation In this activity, students will review and link the molecular, cellular and genetics knowledge to evolution. ![]()
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