Quantitative skills in science: findings from 13 case studies

Authors

  • Kelly E Matthews
  • Peter Adams
  • Shaun Belward
  • Carmel Coady
  • Leanne Rylands
  • Vilma Simbag

Abstract

The focus on mathematics and statistics in undergraduate science education is gaining attention as the scientific community calls for higher standards of quantitative skills (QS). An Australian Learning and Teaching Council (now Office of Learning and Teaching) project explored QS as a graduate learning outcome in science from a whole of program perspective. Using a case study methodology, the paper draws on interview data (n=48) from 13 institutions (11 in Australia and 2 in the United States) exploring how QS are incorporated into the undergraduate science curricula. Framed within a model for large-scale educational change based on the extensive work of Michael Fullan, each case study explored the vision and planning for QS, the implementation of approaches to build science students’ QS across the curriculum and evaluation of subsequent QS learning outcomes. Analysis highlights the tremendous variation in the curricular approaches to build QS across the 13 institutions. We offer four QS curricular models to describe how mathematical and statistical knowledge is developed and applied in science units across the undergraduate degree program.

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Published

2012-08-27