Hoskins Sally G, Stevens Leslie M
Department of Biology and the Graduate Center, City College of the City University of New York, Convent Ave. at 138th St., New York, NY 10031, USA.
Adv Physiol Educ. 2009 Mar;33(1):17-20. doi: 10.1152/advan.90184.2008.
The rapid and accelerating pace of change in physiology and cell biology, along with the easy access to huge amounts of content, have altered the playing field for science students, yet most students are still mainly taught from textbooks. Of necessity, textbooks are usually broad in scope, cover topics much more superficially than do journal articles, and present the scientific process as a linear string of successful experiments, largely ignoring the reality of rejected hypotheses, unanticipated discoveries, or surprising findings that may shift paradigms. We suggest that a more narrow focus on scientific thinking, using a new method for reading a series of journal articles that track the evolution of a single project over a period of years, can more realistically convey the excitement and challenges of research science and perhaps stimulate some students to consider research careers for themselves. Our approach, termed "CREATE" (for Consider, Read, Elucidate hypotheses, Analyze data, and Think of the next Experiment), has proven successful at both demystifying the scientific literature and humanizing science/scientists in undergraduate biology courses (8), and we suggest that it could be profitably expanded to physiology courses.
生理学和细胞生物学领域的变化迅速且加速,再加上能轻松获取大量内容,这改变了理科学生的学习环境,但大多数学生仍主要依靠教科书进行学习。教科书必然内容广泛,对主题的涵盖比期刊文章更为肤浅,且将科学过程呈现为一连串成功实验的线性排列,很大程度上忽略了被否定的假设、意外发现或可能改变范式的惊人结果等现实情况。我们建议,更聚焦于科学思维,采用一种新方法阅读一系列期刊文章,这些文章追踪一个项目多年的发展历程,这样能更真实地传达科研的兴奋感和挑战,或许还能激发一些学生考虑投身科研事业。我们的方法称为“CREATE”(即思考、阅读、阐明假设、分析数据以及构思下一个实验),已成功地在本科生物学课程中揭开了科学文献的神秘面纱并使科学/科学家形象更人性化(8),我们认为它可有益地扩展到生理学课程中。