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CBE Life Sci Educ 6(4): 343-349 2007
DOI: 10.1187/cbe.07-05-0027
© 2007 American Society for Cell Biology
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Articles

A New Paradigm for Mentored Undergraduate Research in Molecular Microbiology

Susan Carson

Biotechnology Program and Department of Plant Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695

Monitoring Editor: Mary Lee Ledbetter

Address correspondence to: Susan Carson (sue_carson{at}ncsu.edu)

Science educators agree that an undergraduate research experience is critical for students who are considering graduate school or research careers. The process of researching a topic in the primary literature, designing experiments, implementing those experiments, and analyzing the results is essential in developing the analytical skills necessary to become a true scientist. Because training undergraduates who will only be in the laboratory for a short period is time consuming for faculty mentors, many students are unable to find appropriate research opportunities. We hypothesized that we could effectively mentor several students simultaneously, using a method that is a hybrid of traditional undergraduate research and a traditional laboratory course. This article describes a paradigm for mentored undergraduate research in molecular microbiology where students have ownership of their individual projects, but the projects are done in parallel, enabling the faculty mentor to guide multiple students efficiently.







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