Teaching and understanding evolution is challenging because students must synthesize several biological processes that are traditionally taught separately. We developed a set of free online lessons and activities centered on a single evolutionary phenomenon – why deer mice have different fur colors in different subpopulations – to help high school students better understand how these different biological processes, operating at different scales, work together to influence a single organismal trait. Through scaffolded investigations, guiding questions, model building, and pointed analysis, students learn how ecology, cellular biology, molecular biology, genetic inheritance, and population genetics all work together to influence a shift in fur color over time. Using an innovative multilevel simulation, students manipulate and examine these different processes from the population level all the way down to the DNA level. In this article, we describe the lessons and materials we have developed for high school biology students. We outline the learning goals and highlight the major components of the technology and activities in each lesson. We then provide information on how to access our curricular and support materials, and conclude with user feedback from our pilot testing.
ConnectedBio: An Integrative & Technology-Enhanced Approach to Evolution Education for High School
REBECCA ELLIS ([email protected]) is a Research Associate on the Connected Biology Project at Lyman Briggs College, Michigan State University (MSU), East Lansing, MI 48825.
FRIEDA REICHSMAN ([email protected]) is a Senior Scientist at The Concord Consortium, Concord, MA 01742.
LOUISE S. MEAD ([email protected]) is the Education Director at the BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action, and Adjunct Faculty in the Department of Integrative Biology, MSU.
JAMES J. SMITH ([email protected]) is Professor Emeritus in the Lyman Briggs College and the Department of Entomology, MSU.
KILEY McELROY-BROWN ([email protected]) is a Scrum Master and Project Manager at The Concord Consortium.
PETER J. T. WHITE ([email protected]) is an Associate Professor at Lyman Briggs College and the Department of Entomology, MSU.
Rebecca Ellis, Frieda Reichsman, Louise S. Mead, James J. Smith, Kiley McElroy-Brown, Peter J. T. White; ConnectedBio: An Integrative & Technology-Enhanced Approach to Evolution Education for High School. The American Biology Teacher 1 August 2021; 83 (6): 362–371. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2021.83.6.362
Download citation file: