Course Based Undergraduate Research Demystifies and Democratizes inquiry-based research for undergraduate STEM students

Tuesday 9:15am - 10:00am Scandinavian 1
Concurrent Session

Kristen Hoffbuhr, Skagit Valley College
Gabriel Mast, Skagit Valley College
Grant Blume, University of Washington-Seattle Campus
Brian Brady, Skagit Valley College
Cindy Elliser, Skagit Valley College
Cliff Palmer, Skagit Valley College

Undergraduate research experiences (UREs) have been shown to improve both persistence and graduation rates for women and students of color (Alquicira et al. 2022). Although these effects are observed broadly across higher education, they are especially pronounced in the context of the STEM fields (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine 2017). Although community colleges disproportionately enroll students who can most benefit from UREs, structural barriers make UREs rare at community colleges (Hewlett 2018).
This change project, based at a mid-sized community college in Washington State, is part of the state's Consortium for Undergraduate Research and Equity (CURE) and aspires to address the paucity of community college research opportunities in STEM through the design and implementation of a year-long research project for students enrolled in the primary course sequence for biology majors (approximately 50-100 annually). The project's underlying theory of change is twofold. First, two local community partners and four science faculty use backward design to create a research project that embeds laboratory skills and learning outcomes in a year-long URE. Second, participating faculty replace the entire lab curriculum in the college's three-course biology sequence with this applied year-long research project. 
Incorporating applied research into the college's biology curriculum demystifies and democratizes inquiry-based research for first-generation, underrepresented, and/or academically underprepared students, who also may not have the financial privilege to participate in an unpaid internship that affords them such an experience. Preliminary findings from this change initiative will focus on project goals related to creating equitable access across a range of outcomes including demographic participation rates, the development of professional STEM research skills, and the extent to which UREs enhance a community college student's sense of belonging among a larger scientific community.