Exploring experiences

of Failure in CUREs

A CURE for Failure

From this research, we hope to understand the vastness of the student experience of failure in course-based undergraduate research experiences (or CUREs). This will allow us to seek evidence-based approaches to mitigating the negative consequences of failures, while supporting potential learning. This may also help us identify specific strategies to building student resilience in science courses. Ultimately, our aim is to facilitate and empower student learning in science spaces!

What do we mean by “Failure”?

We define the failure experience in science as choices/actions that present challenges and lead to an unexpected outcome or unproductive scientific task and the choices/actions taken in response to that challenge or outcome. Challenges describe situations where students could experience tensions or struggle.

We hope to study failures that occur in the context of engaging in the technical aspects of research during data collection and analysis. These could include failures in method, like selection of primers that do not yield amplification of desired DNA sequences, or failure in concept, like an approach to an investigation that does not account for all variables.

These failures are important because they a) occur in undergraduate learning contexts, b) are clear, tractable units of change, c) have potential for iteration and improvement within the time scale of a semester or year (though this time is not always provided).

Intrapersonal constructs of study