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Cannibalism, Kuru, and Mad Cows: Prion Disease As a “Choose-Your-Own-Experiment” Case Study to Simulate Scientific Inquiry in Large Lectures

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  • Antonio Serrano
  • Jeffrey Liebner
  • Justin K Hines

Abstract

Despite significant efforts to reform undergraduate science education, students often perform worse on assessments of perceptions of science after introductory courses, demonstrating a need for new educational interventions to reverse this trend. To address this need, we created An Inexplicable Disease, an engaging, active-learning case study that is unusual because it aims to simulate scientific inquiry by allowing students to iteratively investigate the Kuru epidemic of 1957 in a choose-your-own-experiment format in large lectures. The case emphasizes the importance of specialization and communication in science and is broadly applicable to courses of any size and sub-discipline of the life sciences.This piece from our Education series uses prion disease as the basis for an active-learning case study that simulates scientific inquiry with a choose-your-own-experiment design. Applicable to courses of any size and subdiscipline of biology.

Suggested Citation

  • Antonio Serrano & Jeffrey Liebner & Justin K Hines, 2016. "Cannibalism, Kuru, and Mad Cows: Prion Disease As a “Choose-Your-Own-Experiment” Case Study to Simulate Scientific Inquiry in Large Lectures," PLOS Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(1), pages 1-11, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pbio00:1002351
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002351
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