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Katherine Ryker; Laura Lukes; Annie Klyce; Kim Cheek; Nicole D. LaDue; Peggy McNeal – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
The geoscience education research (GER) community has evolved and grown over the past several decades. Using Wenger et al.'s Community of Practice (CoP) model (2002), we discuss how the GER CoP (which is broader than the formal discipline of GER) has changed, highlighting noteworthy events and growth points. Trends in community membership and…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Educational Research, Science Education, Communities of Practice
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Anahi Carrera; Thomas Luckie; Emily H. G. Cooperdock – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
First-generation college students (FGCS), defined as students whose parents did not earn a baccalaureate degree, encounter distinct obstacles navigating academia. Barriers faced by FGCS, including lack of financial security, lower sense of belonging, and inadequate mentorship, are often compounded by the intersection of other marginalized…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Earth Science, Disproportionate Representation, Barriers
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Katherine K. Ellins; Lucas J. Legendre; Adam S. Papendieck; Julia A. Clarke – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
A recurrent theme in the geosciences is the persistent need for more student demographic diversity, especially in academic programs. A strategy to make the geosciences inclusive and motivating for one marginalized group may not succeed with another, requiring the search for new approaches. The Geoscience Ambassadors, an extracurricular program for…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Extracurricular Activities, College Programs, Undergraduate Students
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Samuel Cornelius Nyarko; William P. Gilhooly III; Lean Hong Tan; Stuart M. Kenderes – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
The utilization of a professional geoscience career panel as a curricular classroom activity can be essential for promoting career awareness. By interacting with professionals, students can be exposed to diverse geoscientific careers, helping them understand various professional paths and the real-world applications of their studies. Using social…
Descriptors: Oceanography, Career Awareness, Earth Science, Scientists
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Kathryn M. Bateman; Brandin Conrath; Joy Ham; Anne Egger; Kristen St. John; Thomas Shipley – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic differentially disrupted daily activity in higher education during the spring of 2020, with ramifications for geoscience instructors' teaching practices. Though facing similar challenges in this transition to many faculty nationwide, disciplinary specific coursework, such as field work and field trips to observe geological…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Science Instruction, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Katherine Ryker; Rachel Teasdale; Kelsey Bitting – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Third-party observations using validated observation protocols (OPs) provide a reliable way of recording teacher and student behaviors across different classrooms and institutions, which can then be used to identify what pedagogical strategies geoscience faculty use and how they are tied to learning outcomes of importance to the field. We examined…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Earth Science, STEM Education, Higher Education
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Evelyn Abagayle Boyd; Kelly Best Lazar; Matthew Voigt – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
As a response to the increased need for humanization and representation in STEM, a set of open-source, customizable icons was developed using stackable vector graphics to allow participants to design their own research icons. These icons have the potential to both grant research participant's greater agency in their representation and attempt to…
Descriptors: Participant Characteristics, Personal Autonomy, Earth Science, Visualization
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Daniel David Gregory; Alison Jolley – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
Flipped classrooms have been shown to be useful in both introductory and advanced computational Earth Science courses. However, to date they have not been implemented in advanced level non-computational courses. Here we assess a three-year study into the use of flipped classroom techniques in a fourth year undergraduate Mineral Deposits class. One…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Study, Earth Science, Flipped Classroom
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Peggy McNeal; Deepika Menon; Deef Al Shorman; Paulina Gajewska-Schaefer – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
The purpose of this study was to investigate undergraduate students' conceptions of Earth scientists, using drawing as a tool, during introductory Earth science courses. We explored two research questions: 1) What student conceptions are evident in undergraduate students' drawings of Earth scientists? and 2) How do undergraduate students'…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Earth Science, Freehand Drawing, Pretests Posttests
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Julia A. Domenech; Renee M. Clary – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Ventura, California's 2023 winter storm activity underscored the impact that runoff has on recreational water quality and public health. To examine public perception of stormwater runoff, coastal water quality, and community decision-making toward recreating in polluted water, an online survey of the Ventura River watershed community determined…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Public Opinion, Public Health, Water
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Alex K. Manda – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
This study explores the relationship between the self-confidence and content knowledge of undergraduate students in a large enrollment geoscience course following an active-learning think-pair-share (TPS) activity, and whether high confidence necessarily leads to overconfidence. We used a pre-experimental, one group pre-test -- post-test design,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Active Learning, Cooperative Learning, Large Group Instruction
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Penny M. Rowe; James Bernhard; Jacob Price; Anoushka Adhav; Danielle Dolan; Anna Van Boven; Lea Fortmann; Michael Town; Steven Neshyba – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Climate change is a major concern to undergraduate students. Understanding climate change relies on an understanding of polar regions. However, courses on polar regions are rare at undergraduate institutions. Polar ENgagement through GUided INquiry (PENGUIN) modules were designed to give students experience with polar research in a variety of…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Inquiry, Active Learning, Undergraduate Students
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Michael R. Brudzinski; Thomas F. Shipley; Joy Ham – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Recent studies have identified an incomplete student understanding of how elastic rebound causes earthquakes. We hypothesized that realistic imaging of spatial patterns in ground motions over the course of the earthquake cycle would improve student understanding. Incorporating spatial change information in the form of both motion vectors and…
Descriptors: Natural Disasters, Concept Formation, Geographic Information Systems, Undergraduate Students
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Ennea Fairchild; Julie Sexton; Harmony Newman; Krystal Hinerman; Jessica McKay; Eric Riggs – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
Undergraduate summer field programs are valuable experiences that can foster or reduce students' self-efficacy, an important factor in students' success and retention in geoscience. Growing research findings show that science field experiences can be hostile and unwelcoming to students with marginalized identities, which may negatively impact…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Earth Science, Field Experience Programs, Undergraduate Students
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Timothy G. Klavon; Svetha Mohan; Joshua B. Jaffe; Thalia Stogianos; Donna Governor; Doug Lombardi – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
Socially relevant geoscience topics may be difficult for students to learn. For example, connecting hydraulic fracturing to Midwestern US earthquake swarms and using the fossil record to infer past Earth environments may challenge students because of their prior exposures to nonscientific explanations. Sociocognitive theoretical perspectives based…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Earth Science, Science Education, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
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