posted on 2016-08-17, 14:13authored byCheryl Hurkett, Derek Raine, Mervyn Roy
Most undergraduate science programmes provide students with a project through which they can obtain some experience of the research process, but few students get to know the mechanism by which research output reaches the public domain. Fewer still get to appreciate that the hard part of originality in science is to ask the right questions. .
At the University of Leicester we have introduced a module to explicitly cover these areas. Our Physics students and Natural Sciences students learn about scientific publishing and peer review by acting as authors, referees, and editors of their own scientific journal. Split into small research groups, the students come up with original ideas, conduct research and write short scientific papers. They peer-review the work of other groups in a process overseen by a student editorial board who, based on the referees’ reports, have the final say on whether or not a paper is published.
We use professional Open Journal Systems software to run the submission, review and publication processes of the journal online and, since 2008, all the students’ published work has been publically available from the journal website. The student experience is now a true reflection of that of professional research scientists and, as an added incentive to the students, some of the more creative published papers have recently gone viral, including interviews on Radio 4 and CNN international.
In this presentation we shall report on the development of the module and its scalability
History
Citation
HEASTEM 2014 Annual Learning and Teaching Conference: Enhancing the STEM Student Journey, University of Edinburgh, 2014
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy
Source
HEASTEM 2014 Annual Learning and Teaching Conference: Enhancing the STEM Student Journey, University of Edinburgh
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NA (Not Applicable or Unknown)
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HEASTEM 2014 Annual Learning and Teaching Conference: Enhancing the STEM Student Journey