Bodnar Richard J, Stellar James R, Kraft Tamar T, Loiacono Ilyssa, Bajnath Adesh, Rotella Francis M, Barrientos Alicia, Aghanori Golshan, Olsson Kerstin, Coke Tricia, Huang Donald, Luger Zeke, Mousavi Seyed Ali Reza, Dindyal Trisha, Naqvi Naveen, Kim Jung-Yo
Department of Psychology, Queens College, City University of New York, Flushing, NY 11367.
J Undergrad Neurosci Educ. 2013 Oct 15;12(1):A34-41. eCollection 2013.
In a large (250 registrants) general education lecture course, neuroscience principles were taught by two professors as co-instructors, starting with simple brain anatomy, chemistry, and function, proceeding to basic brain circuits of pleasure and pain, and progressing with fellow expert professors covering relevant philosophical, artistic, marketing, and anthropological issues. With this as a base, the course wove between fields of high relevance to psychology and neuroscience, such as food addiction and preferences, drug seeking and craving, analgesic pain-inhibitory systems activated by opiates and stress, neuroeconomics, unconscious decision-making, empathy, and modern neuroscientific techniques (functional magnetic resonance imaging and event-related potentials) presented by the co-instructors and other Psychology professors. With no formal assigned textbook, all lectures were PowerPoint-based, containing links to supplemental public-domain material. PowerPoints were available on Blackboard several days before the lecture. All lectures were also video-recorded and posted that evening. The course had a Facebook page for after-class conversation and one of the co-instructors communicated directly with students on Twitter in real time during lecture to provide momentary clarification and comment. In addition to graduate student Teaching Assistants (TAs), to allow for small group discussion, ten undergraduate students who performed well in a previous class were selected to serve as discussion leaders. The Discussion Leaders met four times at strategic points over the semester with groups of 20-25 current students, and received one credit of Independent Study, thus creating a course within a course. The course grade was based on weighted scores from two multiple-choice exams and a five-page writing assignment in which each student reviewed three unique, but brief original peer-review research articles (one page each) combined with expository writing on the first and last pages. A draft of the first page, collected early in the term, was returned to each student by graduate TAs to provide individual feedback on scientific writing. Overall the course has run three times at ful or near enrollment capacity despite being held at an 8:00 AM time slot. Student-generated teaching evaluations place it well within the normal range, while this format importantly contributes to budget efficiency permitting the teaching of more required small-format courses (e.g., freshman writing). The demographics of the course have changed to one in which the vast majority of the students are now outside the disciplines of neuroscience or psychology and are taking the course to fulfill a General Education requirement. This pattern allows the wide dissemination of basic neuroscientific knowledge to a general college audience.
在一门大型(250名注册学生)的通识教育讲座课程中,神经科学原理由两位教授共同授课。课程从简单的脑解剖学、化学和功能开始,接着讲授愉悦和疼痛的基本脑回路,随后与其他专家教授一起探讨相关的哲学、艺术、营销和人类学问题。以此为基础,该课程穿梭于与心理学和神经科学高度相关的领域之间,比如食物成瘾与偏好、药物寻求与渴望、阿片类药物和压力激活的镇痛疼痛抑制系统、神经经济学、无意识决策、同理心,以及由共同授课教师和其他心理学教授介绍的现代神经科学技术(功能磁共振成像和事件相关电位)。由于没有指定的正式教材,所有讲座均以PowerPoint形式呈现,并包含指向补充公共领域材料的链接。讲座前几天,PowerPoint会发布在Blackboard上。所有讲座当晚也会进行录像并发布。该课程有一个用于课后交流的Facebook页面,其中一位共同授课教师在讲座期间会在Twitter上与学生实时直接交流,以提供即时的澄清和评论。除了研究生助教(TA)外,为了进行小组讨论,还从之前课程中表现出色的十名本科生中挑选出来担任讨论组长。讨论组长在学期中的关键节点与20至25名在读学生分成小组进行了四次会面,并获得一个独立研究学分,从而在课程中形成了一门“课程中的课程”。课程成绩基于两次多项选择题考试和一份五页的写作作业的加权分数,其中每位学生要审阅三篇独特但简短的同行评审原创研究文章(每篇一页),并在第一页和最后一页结合说明性写作。学期初收集的第一页草稿由研究生助教返还给每位学生,以提供关于科学写作的个人反馈。总体而言,尽管该课程安排在上午8点的时段,但已经满员或接近满员地运行了三次。学生给出的教学评价处于正常范围内,而这种教学形式对预算效率有重要贡献,从而能够开设更多所需的小型课程(例如新生写作课程)。该课程的学生构成发生了变化,现在绝大多数学生并非神经科学或心理学专业,他们修这门课是为了满足通识教育要求。这种模式使得基础神经科学知识能够广泛传播给普通大学的受众。