Foldscope Embedded Pedagogy in Stem Education: A Case Study of SDG4 Promotion in India
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Study of pond fauna.
- Evolution of mouthparts in arthropods.
- Compound eyes in insects.
- Field studies to identify pests in plants of economic importance.
- Study of parasites.
2. Theory
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Foldscope
3.2. Source of the Fresh-Water Organisms
3.3. Estimation of the Size of the Ommatidium in Housefly’s Compound Eyes
3.3.1. Field Exploration of Red Spider Mite
3.3.2. Study of Parasites
3.4. Selection of Items to Study with Foldscope
3.5. Participants
3.6. Adapting Syllabus to Foldscope
3.7. Assessment of Adaptation
3.8. Feedback
3.9. Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Introducing the Use of the Foldscope to the Students
4.2. Study of the Selected Items from the Curriculum
4.2.1. Study of Pond Fauna
4.2.2. Observation of Mouthparts and Compound Eyes in Arthropods
4.2.3. Field Explorations to Study Red Spider Mite Infestations on Tea Leaves
4.2.4. Observation of Headlouse with Foldscope
5. Analysis of Foldscope-Adapted Curriculum Items by Researchers
5.1. Study of Pond Fauna
5.2. Study of the Mouthparts of Arthropods
5.3. Field Explorations Using the Foldscope
5.4. The Study of Parasites
5.5. Student Response
- “Observing the pond fauna helped me see unstained protists, and their movement”; “The book gives 2-D diagram of the larval gills, I observed that it is really a complex mesh and not straight lines given in the diagram.”
- “Evolution of mouthparts was more interesting to study with the samples collected by me. I got so intrigued that I collected them at home also to create my own picture gallery of mouthparts. This was more exciting than drawing diagrams. I now understand how arthropods are the most diverse phylum in the invertebrate animal kingdom”.
- “Compound eyes of butterfly and moth are taught in the curriculum with the same diagram, but I actually found that there were subtle differences in the appearance of the two in real life. I will collect more samples at home and observe them on my own.”
- “Collection of pests in the field was an eye-opening experience, how a simple innovation can be useful in agriculture. I even observed the leaves and other plant structures of the infested plant”.
- “Parasitology is a complete subject in which we use stains to observe different parasites. But with foldscope, I observed worms from the soil, water, and the headlouse. The details recorded with videos helped me to correlate better with the morphological structures described in textbooks”.
6. Discussion
6.1. SDG4 Goals Served by Our Work
6.2. UN ESD Goals
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Action Area | Alignment |
---|---|
Advancing Policy | Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India, launched the foldscope initiative and invited project proposals to promote STEM education on a variety of topics using the foldscope. |
Transforming Learning | We applied for the project and received the grant. We procured foldscopes from DBT, Ministry of Science Technology, Government of India. As we worked at the department of Zoology, we analysed the curriculum and explored the items with the foldscope to teach microscopy and natural science concepts underlined by the syllabus in the BSc. Zoology of the University of Delhi. We developed activities, and standardized protocols; and supported them with authentic literature. Authentic learning activities with the foldscope were tested in classrooms with students. |
Building facilitator capacity | We conducted DBT-funded workshops at other schools and colleges in different districts of India to train other lecturers/teachers on using foldscopes. |
Empower and mobilize youth | A foldscope was provided to each student as a personal microscope to carry out their own exploration. |
Accelerate local actions | We accelerated local action by conducting workshops in schools, colleges, neighbourhoods, and communities in aspirational districts of India. |
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Kulshreshtha, P.; Gupta, S.; Shaikh, R.; Aggarwal, D.; Sharma, D.; Rahi, P. Foldscope Embedded Pedagogy in Stem Education: A Case Study of SDG4 Promotion in India. Sustainability 2022, 14, 13427. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013427
Kulshreshtha P, Gupta S, Shaikh R, Aggarwal D, Sharma D, Rahi P. Foldscope Embedded Pedagogy in Stem Education: A Case Study of SDG4 Promotion in India. Sustainability. 2022; 14(20):13427. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013427
Chicago/Turabian StyleKulshreshtha, Parul, Sunita Gupta, Rafikh Shaikh, Divya Aggarwal, Deuvshree Sharma, and Praveen Rahi. 2022. "Foldscope Embedded Pedagogy in Stem Education: A Case Study of SDG4 Promotion in India" Sustainability 14, no. 20: 13427. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013427
APA StyleKulshreshtha, P., Gupta, S., Shaikh, R., Aggarwal, D., Sharma, D., & Rahi, P. (2022). Foldscope Embedded Pedagogy in Stem Education: A Case Study of SDG4 Promotion in India. Sustainability, 14(20), 13427. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142013427