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Area Teachers Involved in RET Program

Rural Educators Engage in Bioanalytical Engineering Reasearch and Teaching

Six science and mathematics teachers from rural high schools in Oklahoma are engaged in a National Science Foundation-supported summer program at the University of Oklahoma’s Center for BioAnalysis in an effort to improve STEM teaching in rural classrooms and increase the number of rural students who select and successfully graduate from a higher education STEM field.

“Combining the teaching expertise of the high school teachers with the research expertise of the faculty creates a powerful synergism for producing innovative and dynamic science curricula that directly impact current issues pertinent to rural Oklahoman communities,” said Mark Nanny, director of the Rural Educators Program and professor of environmental science in the Gallogly College of Engineering.

Oklahoma rural educators selected for the 2016 summer program include: Arnold and Niccole Rech, Fort Towson High School; Ashley Rodriguez, Clinton High School; Sue Flaming, Foyil Junior/High School; Joe Albrecht, Liberty High School; and Shawn Cusak, Northwest Technology Center. The program includes laboratory work, seminars on real-world applications of bioanalytical engineering, curricula development and design, and evaluation and assessment activities.

Each educator is paired with a faculty mentor over seven weeks doing cutting-edge research in OU laboratories. Besides learning research skills, the program also focuses on developing classroom curricula and transferring research experiences into the classroom. A workshop on writing successful proposals focuses on rural educators preparing proposals for their classroom curricula. In the final week, educators present research activities, classroom curricula and prepare a research poster for display in the classroom and OU laboratory.

While much of the current research in bioanalytical engineering focuses on medical problems, bioanalytical engineering is a powerful tool for all areas involving biology, such as the improved production of biofuels, the impact of biofilms on the biocorrosion of steel infrastructure in the petroleum industry and the environmental bioremediation of groundwater.

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The project will work to involve rural high school science and mathematics teachers and regional community college instructors in bioanalytical engineering research, to help them improve the teaching of STEM in their classrooms, and to have them participate in a sustainable professional network that will increase the number of rural students who select and successfully graduate from higher education STEM fields.

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