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. 2024:9:1442306.
doi: 10.3389/feduc.2024.1442306. Epub 2024 Oct 23.

The Professional Identity of STEM Faculty as Instructors of Course-based Research Experiences

David Hanauer  1 Richard Alvey  2 Ping An  3 Christa Bancroft  4 Kristen Butela  3 Kari Clase  5 Sean Coleman  6 D Parks Collins  7 Stephanie Conant  8 Pamela Connerly  9 Bernadette Connors  10 Megan Dennis  11 Erin Doyle  12 Dustin Edwards  13 Christy Fillman  14 Ann Findley  15 Victoria Frost  16 Maria Gainey  17 Urszula Golebiewska  18 Nancy Guild  14 Sharon Gusky  19 Allison Johnson  20 Kristen Johnson  21 Karen Klyczek  22 Julia Lee-Soety  23 Heather Lindberg  24 Matthew Mastropaolo  25 Julie Merkle  26 Jon Mitchell  27 Sally Molloy  28 Fernando Nieto-Fernandez  29 Jillian Nissen  29 Tiara Perez Morales  30 Nick Peters  31 Susanne Pfeifer  32 Richard Pollenz  33 Mary Preuss  34 German Rosas-Acosta  35 Margaret Saha  36 Amy Sprenkle  37 C Nicole Sunnen  23 Deborah Tobiason  38 Sara Tolsma  39 Vassie Ware  40 Yesmi Patricia Ahumada-Santos  41 Regina Alvarez  10 Justin Anderson  42 Mary Ayuk  43 María Elena Báez-Flores  41 Dondra Bailey  44 Frederick Baliraine  45 Elizabeth Behr  46 Andrea Beyer  47 Suparna Bhalla  48 Lisa Bono  49 Donald Breakwell  50 Christine Byrum  51 Iain Duffy  52 Alyssa Gleich  53 Melinda Harrison  54 Renee Ho  3 Lee Hughes  55 Jacob Kagey  8 Kathryn Kohl  16 Sean McClory  56 Alison Moyer  57 María Alejandra Mussi  58 Holly Nance  59 Imade Nsa  60 Shallee Page  61 Jesus Ricardo Parra-Unda  41 Jessica Rocheleau  62 Sarah Swerdlow  63 Kara Thoemke  64 Megan Valentine  65 Quinn Vega  66 Catherine Ward  67 Daniel Williams  68 Ellen Wisner  69 William Biederman  70 Steven Cresawn  71 Mark Graham  72 Graham Hatfull  3 Danielle Heller  70 Deborah Jacobs-Sera  3 Denise Monti  70 Pushpa Ramakrishna  70 Daniel Russell  3 Viknesh Sivanathan  70
Affiliations

The Professional Identity of STEM Faculty as Instructors of Course-based Research Experiences

David Hanauer et al. Front Educ (Lausanne). 2024.

Abstract

The professional identity of scientists has historically been cultivated to value research over teaching, which can undermine initiatives that aim to reform science education. Course-Based Research Experiences (CRE) and the inclusive Research and Education Communities (iREC) are two successful and impactful reform efforts that integrate research and teaching. The aim of this study is to explicate the professional identity of instructors who implement a CRE within an established iREC and to explore how this identity contributes to the success of these programs. 97 CRE instructors from the Science Education Alliance (SEA) iREC participated in a 2-year, multi-stage, qualitative research project that involved weekly reflective journaling, autoethnographic description, small group evaluation and writing, and large-scale community checking. The resulting description of professional identity consisted of shared values (inclusivity, student success, community membership, ownership/agency, science, overcoming failure, and persistence), specified roles (mentor, advocate, scientist, educator, motivator, collaborator, community builder, learner, evaluator and project manager) and a stated sense of self (dedicated, resilient, pride in students, multiskilled, valued, community member, responsible and overworked). Analysis of individual reflective diary entries revealed how a professional identity underpinned and facilitated the ways in which faculty addressed challenges that arose and worked towards the success of every student. It is the self-concept of the professional identity of the instructor in the context of the CRE classroom that directed the extended commitment and effort that these instructors evidently put into their work with students, which facilitated student engagement, student persistence, and their collective scientific output. The study concludes that a professional identity of STEM faculty in the context of a CRE and iREC combines being a researcher and educator, and that this integrated identity is central for current initiatives aimed at transforming undergraduate STEM education.

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