| Pat Marsteller
Education:
B.S. University of Maryland, 1969. Biology
M.S. University of South Carolina, 1978. Biology. "Celestial
compass orientation in juvenile American alligators, Alligator mississippiensis"
Ph.D. University of Florida, 1985. Zoology. "Quantitative genetics
of life history evolution."
Hi. I prefer Pat. I'm on the Biology faculty and I direct the Hughes
Undergraduate Science Initiative and our summer research program.
I'm the oldest of 11 kids. I am married and most of you know my
son, Sean Murphy. My husband, Fred, also works at Emory. I've worked
with alligators, fruitflies, snakes, and more.
More below...
Teaching Interests:
Prior to arriving at Emory in 1990, I have taught at large state
universities and tiny liberal arts colleges. This experience gave
me the opportunity to teach nearly every course in Biology. I love
teaching because transmitting the joys (and trials) of the process
of science to students gives them the tools for lifelong learning
and discovery. Science to me is not merely a body of accumulated
facts and theories, but an exhilarating process of discovery. Good
teachers are constant learners, inventing, creating and discovering
new ways to facilitate learning. As my friend John Jungck says,
"teachers must move from the position of sage on the stage
to guide on the side." Learning is an active process- students
are not vessels into which we pour our accumulated wisdom; they
are participants is generating, constructing and linking knowledge
by placing new content in the context of what they know and by developing
critical analysis skills so that they can generate reasonable hypotheses,
test them, analyze carefully and draw reasonable conclusions. Good
teachers and good students should "Question Authority"
as the bumper sticker on my door suggests. Don't just believe! Delve
into it, connect, apply, make it your own!
Courses taught at Emory:
Since my full-time job is to direct and develop the Hughes programs,
I haven't taught huge numbers of courses but I hope you'll agree
that they're all interesting!
Physiology with Dr. Paul Lennard:
Paul and I midwifed the birth of LearnLink in this physiology course.
We used simulation games and student presentations to generate active
student involvement in addition to more standard lectures. Between
us we spread the fame of Planet X, where nothing works like it does
on earth.
Evolution:
My evolution course is constantly evolving! It covers the standard
content , using simulations, problem sets, lectures, discussions
and other methods. Last year for instance each member of the class
became for a day a Victorian, either for or against this new and
dangerous idea of evolution. We read Darwin in the original as well
as numerous essays by Stephen J. Gould and others, in addition to
the text. In its next evolutionary change we will use and contribute
to a WWW site I'm constructing. We may also reverse the conventional
order and focus first on macroevolution and time.
Interdisciplinary Science Seminar:
OK, OK, it's not a course but....every Wednesday at five in DS 308
for the past two years, fall and spring and even during the summer
I invite a scientist from some discipline to speak to undergraduates
about their research and about how they became scientists. Each
is asked to address their own career path and options and alternatives
to straight research careers are also explored. Join us!
Scientific Attitudes:
This course explored the scientific process and its strengths and
limitations. By dealing with how paradigms develop, how they advance
and constrain questions, how scientists are trained, and the values
and attitudes underlying science, we developed a deeper appreciation
of the advantages of the scientific process for problem solving
and knowledge acquisition and assessment. In this course students
must develop a grant application, including animal care and use,
human subjects guidelines, budgets, and "sponsored programs
approval". The course culminates in a grant review panel, where
we act as reviewers for the new grants. Developing this course and
teaching it has led me to renew and deepen my interest in several
"research" topics: collaboration vs. competition in science
and values and ethics in science.
Women and Science:
This course is crosslisted in Women's Studies and Interdisciplinary
studies in Culture and Society. It's a seminar course, open to all
interested parties. The course has three major parts. We explore
hypotheses about the influence of gender on the structure and conduct
of science, examining contrasting viewpoints. More practically we
examine the evidence for and against models that suggest that the
structure and process of science has precluded the full participation
of women. We examine whether women "do science differently"
through the biographies of women scientists and through projects.
This year this class will also participate in WWW site development
so that we can begin the "digital legacy" to future classes.
Minority Issues in Biomedical Research:
This course, taught on an occasional basis through IDS and AAAS,
with Dr. Cliff Cockerham and others, is an intensive seminar course,
designed to assess the differential health needs of ethnic groups,
to examine evidence for social, genetic and cultural causes of differential
morbidity and mortality in several minority populations in the US
and to develop students ability to critically assess primary literature
and to write several types of scientific prose. It involves weekly
short papers and one longer analytical paper.
Contributors to Modern Thought: Darwin and the Idea of Evolution:
This is a new course this fall, which will be listed under IDS.
The idea is that we will explore the development of the idea of
evolution from Darwin to the present, focusing primarily on how
this idea influenced other fields of thought. We will study influences
on politics, ethics, religion, philosophy, economics, sociobiology
and literature. Interactions between these fields that advance and
constrain evolutionary thought may also be
explored. Should be fun!
I also teach directed studies for the graduate program in science
education and teach in the Graduate Teaching Assistant course. In
addition I assist in programs in ethics for science grad students.
Director, Hughes Undergraduate Science Initiative
The Hughes programs aim to enhance undergraduate science education
by helping develop courses that involve active learning, make the
curriculum more research oriented and provide programs and opportunities
that will attract and prepare more students for science careers.
We have a special focus on attracting underrepresented populations,
women and minorities to careers in science and medicine. We have
developed academic support programs for all Emory science students
in conjunction with the Office of Multicultural Programs and Services.
These include workshops, free tutoring, special problem-based learning
groups among others. We offer an Interdisciplinary Science Seminar
weekly for all interested students who'd like to find out about
careers in science and cutting edge research. We helped to design
the Advanced Bio Intro. series, Bio 151-2, to give students a real
taste of investigative science as freshman. We helped to design
and implement upper division "project lab" courses in
Molecular Biology, Neuroscience, Cell Physiology, and Developmental
Biology. We offer a Summer research program for 75 students per
year.
Our research programs are open to students in Biology, Physics,
Chemistry, Anthropology, Geosciences, Human and Natural Ecology
and Math/Computer Science. Together with Paul Lennard and Sean Murphy
, I helped to develop and implement Project LearnLink . Our special
project this year is to develop and fund labs and materials that
link introductory science classes together. The Hughes programs
continue to make a difference and enhance science education. If
you'd like more information, or to get involved by making suggestions
for future enhancements, e-mail me at pmars@learnlink.emory.edu.
We also have a WWW site called ScienceNET at http://www.sciencenet.emory.edu.
Values in Science
With Steve Olson in the Emory Ethics Center I help to develop simulations
and cases to teach research ethics. We teach the graduate course
for chemistry and biology students and we have developed an ethics
component to our summer research program. Steve and I have applied
for a grant to continue this work.
Research Interests
Although I am still interested in my previous research passions,
evolution of behavior, physiology and gene-environment interactions
in organisms' life history patterns, my career has evolved into
a primary interest in the history and philosophy of science, the
evolution of ethics, and in transforming undergraduate science education.
If I ever get some time off, I have several books to write and a
lot of research to do in these areas. One will involve the study
of collaboration and competition in research labs in genetic and
evolution from the new synthesis to the present. I am also interested
in evolution of human behavior and ethics. I am writing some articles
on reform in undergraduate science education and this is another
research interest of mine.
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