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Development of the Biology Card Sorting Task to Measure Conceptual Expertise in Biology
Authors:Julia I Smith  Elijah D Combs  Paul H Nagami  Valerie M Alto  Henry G Goh  Muryam A A Gourdet  Christina M Hough  Ashley E Nickell  Adrian G Peer  John D Coley  Kimberly D Tanner
Institution:*Holy Names University, Oakland, CA 94619;San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA 94132;Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115
Abstract:There are widespread aspirations to focus undergraduate biology education on teaching students to think conceptually like biologists; however, there is a dearth of assessment tools designed to measure progress from novice to expert biological conceptual thinking. We present the development of a novel assessment tool, the Biology Card Sorting Task, designed to probe how individuals organize their conceptual knowledge of biology. While modeled on tasks from cognitive psychology, this task is unique in its design to test two hypothesized conceptual frameworks for the organization of biological knowledge: 1) a surface feature organization focused on organism type and 2) a deep feature organization focused on fundamental biological concepts. In this initial investigation of the Biology Card Sorting Task, each of six analytical measures showed statistically significant differences when used to compare the card sorting results of putative biological experts (biology faculty) and novices (non–biology major undergraduates). Consistently, biology faculty appeared to sort based on hypothesized deep features, while non–biology majors appeared to sort based on either surface features or nonhypothesized organizational frameworks. Results suggest that this novel task is robust in distinguishing populations of biology experts and biology novices and may be an adaptable tool for tracking emerging biology conceptual expertise.
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