NATURAL SCIENCE
RESEARCH COMMUNICATION (SCI - 493)
1 Credit (Attendance, presentation, and formal paper)
(Credit has been increased for fall, 2001)
(Note: The complete sequence of Research Design, NSS Research, NS Seminar,
and NS&M Research Communication
count as commmunication Skills II)
NATURAL SCIENCE SEMINAR (SCI 491, SCI 492)
1/2 credit (Attendance)
FALL, 2002; SPRING 2003
Link
to Schedule, Fall, 2002
Link to Schedule, Spring,
2003
Link
to Evaluation form
D. Collins, Box 6017,
convener, (e-mail: dcollins@warren-wilson.edu)
Purpose:
This seminar provides students and staff with opportunities to interact
professionally in a formal setting, exchange news, ideas and theories,
and explore the interrelationships among various disciplines. Students
are further given the opportunity and motivation to participate in scientific
research: choosing and delimiting a suitable topic, defining the problem
and forming a hypothesis where appropriate, discovering and evaluating
the work of others, conducting their own investigation, evaluating the
data and results, and organizing and communicating their results to others.
Discussion, questions and argument will sharpen communication and logic
skills, as well as increase understanding, both for those presenting seminars
as well as those attending.
Organization:
Each student earning a major in the natural sciences and mathematics must
complete Natural Science Seminar (SCI 491 or SCI 492) for half a
credit. This involves fulfilling the attendance requirement at the
weekly seminar. In another semester, each student completes
Natural
Science Research Communication (SCI 493) for one credit. The
Seminar (SCI 491 or SCI 492) must be enrolled in a separate semester from
the Research Communication (SCI 493). Research Design (SCI 390) (2
credits) and Natural Science Seminar Research (SCI 486) (at least 2 credits)
are required prerequisites for Research Communication (SCI 493).
These are graduation requirements for the majors in the natural science
and the following concentrations in Environmental Studies: Conservation
Biology, Environmental Analysis, Sustainable Forestry, and some Sustainable
Agriculture.
Presentation of a seminar and publishing the archival paper is a graduation
requirement in the Division of Natural Sciences. Each person presenting
the seminar for the graduation requirement must be registered for the course
and complete the attendance requirements. Time slots will be
assigned during the Research Design class. This allows time for the
student to plan the research schedule for NSS Research. The dates
for the presentation will be determined by lot with accommodations allowed
for students' schedules for fall graduation, study abroad, internships.
In addition to getting a time slot, each student must register for NS&M
Research Communication (SCI 493) during November or April registration..
In
order to register for the presentation (493), you must present a signed
note from your research mentor indicating willingness to supervise your
presentation.. The mentor will usually be a member of the WWC science
faculty (Biology, Chemistry, Environmental Studies, Mathematics/Computer
Science, or Physics). If a student wishes to work with a faculty
outside a department listed above, a science faculty must be obtained to
be a co-mentor and must co-sign the student's title at registration time.
The mentors have the responsibility during the NSS Research class to help
the student choose an appropriate topic, guide the student's research and
suggest questions and interpretations about the results. The mentor
will also listen to the practice sessions of the presentation. It
is nearly impossible to make a good presentation without at least a week
of practice sessions.
Suitable topics should be sufficiently specific to allow in-depth study,
but general enough to avoid becoming so technical that the audience cannot
appreciate the study. In addition to the necessary literature
study, the topic should involve at least one of the following modes:
laboratory study, field study, mathematical modeling, or interpretation
of archival data banks. The researcher must clearly present the
scientific purpose or objective(s) of the study. The researcher is
expected to follow scientific methodologies.
Each presention will need a printed abstract (40 copies) which
includes the title, student's name, and mentor's name. The
abstract should be written using the following properties:
-
should be all one paragraph.
-
there should be no citations.
-
each of the four main sections of the talk should be summarized, Introduction,
Methods, Results, Discussion. Two or three sentences should be used
to summarize each section but this should be written as a cohesive paragraph
without separate headings.
-
the objective should be included and written clearly as an if, why, or
whether question. It does not need to be stated as a hypothesis.
-
the summary of the results should be very detailed and include P values,
correlation coefficients, Chi-square values, and means where appropriate.
-
the final line should be a strong conclusion statement that summarizes
the entire project.
The biggest mistake students have made in the past preparation of abstracts
is failure to summarize the Discussion or to indicate what the implications
of the results are to the wider world.
A bibliography, alphabetized by first author's last name, should
be printed on the reverse side of the abstract. It is important
that the bulk of the bibliography consist of recent peer-reviewed articles.
The style for abstracts and bibliographies are outlined in the Research
Design Handbook, by Dr. Louise Weber. Each presenter must submit
the abstract via e-mail (or attached file in Microsoft Word for Windows)
to the coordinator within one week after presenting the seminar.
The abstracts will be published on the World Wide Web along with the schedule.
Faculty will often suggest improvements to the abstract, hence the one
week "grace" period.
The advisor will introduce the seminar speaker and provide appropriate
background. Seminar presentations should be succinct - approximately
25 minutes long (including discussion with the audience) with appropriate
use of slides, charts, and visuals. Five minutes of the 25 alloted
minutes should be allowed for questions. It is important to follow
the schedule and not run-over the alloted total time of 25 minutes.
Time is required for announcements and set-up between speakers. The
length of discussion and the total presentation length will be monitored
by the convenor with the possibility being cut-off if the speaker goes
beyond the alloted time. This requires work and diligence and practice
on the part of the presenter.
Students design their charts and visuals as well as speaking techniques
following the guidelines listed in the Research Design Handbook.
Evaluation:
For grading purposes, presenters (SCI 493) will be assigned a letter grade,
while those registered for SCI 491 or SCI 492 (no presentation)
will be assigned pass/fail. The pass/fail will be based on attendance.
The attendance will be recorded by means of each student filling-out a
peer-support evaluation form at the seminar which will be collected and
returned to the presenter. All faculty attending the talk will fill
out evaluation
forms, and the convener will collect these and deliver the forms to
the student's mentor. All students, including those students who
are presenting seminars, are expected to attend all seminar days
(this means no more than two absences). A student may make
up absences by attending and reporting on a live off-campus presentation
(ACS, Sigma Xi, Workshops, etc.). More than two absences will deduct
one letter grade from the SCI 493 course for each absence beyond two.
Students enrolled in SCI 491 or SCI 492 (pass/fail) will receive a "Failure"
if more than two absences occur. Extended illness may require a repeat
semester to make up.
The presentation grade will be determined from the median of the faculty
evaluations. The presentation counts for 50% of the Research Communication
grade. The other 50% of the grade will be determined by the archival
paper (Natural Science and Mathematics Senior Thesis) that is evaluated
by the mentor (see below)
Expectations for attendees:
In order to obtain a grade of Pass, students are expected to arrive promptly,
fill-out a student evaluation form, fill the seats nearest the front first,
be respectfully attentive, remain until the seminar is completed, and participate
in the question and answer period. Leaving the seminar early (before
5:00) will result in an absence recorded Missing more than two seminar
days will result in a failing grade for those enrolled in the attendance,
and grade deduction for those presenting. More than one absence at
mid-semester will receive a failing grade at mid-semester. Failing
at mid-semester may be made up by satisfactorily completing all the requirements
before the end of the semester. Students are expected to keep track
of their own absences. The convenor will not send reminders if
students have accumulated absences. The convenor will let students
see their record of attendance at any time. Please ask the convenor
in person - not via phone message nor e-mail.
Addendum added in Spring, 2003. It is also expected that
the audience conduct themselves appropriate for professional meetings.
Applause is appropriate when presenters are introduced and when presenters
finish their talks. This shows the highest respect for fellow students.
Yelling and other loud vocalizations are not appropriate.
Expectations for presenters:
Essentially, we are looking for a scholarly presentation. Both content
and presentation style are important. Without content of appropriate
depth and substance, even the best speaking style and finest visuals will
not be enough to earn a good grade. Please see the attached evaluation
form.
It is expected that the presenter practice the presentation with the
mentor(s) and peers. The main reason for this is to instill confidence,
be able to anticipate questions from the audience, and to insure a scientific
understanding. The presentation is a major highlight of a student's
college carreer. It is the time to be proud of one's accomplishments.
Changing presentation date: NO!
After registration, the scheduled dates are permanently fixed. Any
rescheduling requests must be made in writing to the division at least
two weeks prior to the scheduled time, and the division faculty will consider
the extenuating circumstances and decide among three possibilities: 1)
the extenuating circumstances justify rescheduling without penalty; 2)
the rescheduling will be permitted with a letter-grade penalty; 3) the
rescheduling will be denied. Problems with the research (equipment,
crop failure, personnel, etc), generally, should not warrant a new date.
The experimenter can still provide the background, experiment design, preliminary
results, and the problems encountered.
Changing title: NO!
The seminar schedule and titles are published and distributed to a number
of places at the beginning of the semester. It becomes impossible
to re-publish the titles to the distribution list. Titles for fall
semester should be finalized on Monday, Sep 9, 2002.
Natural Science Senior Thesis (50%).
As stated above, 50% of the Research Communication grade comes from the
mentor's evaluation of the senior thesis. Each student in SCI 493
will submit two copies of his/her senior thesis - a formal paper reporting
on the research. The rough draft of the senior thesis is due to the
mentor by the end of week 12. Two copies of the final report are
due to the convenor (D. Collins) at the end of week 14 (Dec. 6, 2002, May
2, 2003). One of these copies will be delivered to the Archives
in the Pew Learning Center and Ellison Library, the 2nd copy will be forwarded
to the mentor for evaluation. If the grading copy is late or missing,
or if the rough draft is late or missing, then the mentor should make appropriate
grade adjustments. The mentor's grade report will be reported to
the convenor by the beginning of week 16 (Dec. 16, 2002, May 12, 2003).
.
The thesis should follow the following format:
-
Abstract
-
Introduction - the background of the material, survey of literature,
and description of the experiment/phenomena
-
Methods (or procedure) - the clear objectives of the investigation,
the details of the experiment, the methodology of gathering the data, the
problems encountered and how they were solved
-
Results - the results should be tabulated and should include error
analysis. The results should be presented graphically as well as
tables.
-
Discussion - the scientific implications of the results should be
discussed and clear answers to the objectives of the study should be presented.
-
Acknowledgements
-
Literature Cited. All the sources of content and ideas should
be cited in the paper.
Further writing guidelines are listed in the Research Design Handbook
and
linked
here.
The thesis will contain the completed study and address problems that
may not have been solved in the research course. Students should
pace themselves in the Research Communication course so that they can complete
both the oral presentation and the thesis before the deadline(s).
ACADEMIC HONESTY: Perhaps more than any other endeavor,
science research depends on objectivity and honesty on the part of the
researcher. Falsification of facts (making-up data), literature cited,
or plagiarism, cheating, or other unethical behavior could result in an
F for the assignment in question or an F for the course. A letter
describing the incident may also be sent to the Dean as part of a student's
permanent record. This course abides by the campus policy on academic
honesty as stated in the WWC student handbook.