Part 1: Introduction and Educational Context.- Chapter 1: Introduction: Intentional Innovation in Educational Technology and Media to Promote Students’ Holistic Development.- Chapter 2: Technology, Equity and Inclusion in the Virtual Education Space.- Chapter 3: Institutional Culture of Student Empowerment: Redefining the Roles of Students and Technology.- Chapter 4: From Psychology Laboratory to Student Development: Untangling Momentary Engagement from Longer-term Engagement in Bioscience Education.- Part 2: How Educational Technologies Shape the Classroom Experience.- Chapter 5: Perceptual Learning, Adaptive Learning, and Gamification: Educational Technologies for Pattern Recognition, Problem Solving and Knowledge Retention in Medical Learning.- Chapter 6: The Flipped Classroom: A Guide to Making Evidence-Based Decisions about Implementation.- Chapter 7: Supplementary Videos in the Biosciences: How Stakeholders Can Reinforce Complex Concepts for Self-Directed Learners.- Chapter 8: Aligning assessment goals with the current and future technologies needed to achieve them.- Chapter 9: The Use of Video, Audio and E-portfolios to Provide Feedback.- Chapter 10: Academic Cheating: How Can We Detect and Discourage It?.- Part 3: How Educational Technologies Transcend the Classroom.- Chapter 11: DEBATE PART 1: Attendance and Performance: a New Landscape in the Era of Online Teaching.- Chapter 12: DEBATE PART 2: Lecture Capture, Attendance and Exam Performance in the Biosciences: Exploring Rare Exceptions to the Link Between Attendance and Performance in the Era of Online Teaching.- Chapter 13: Online Science Education at Scale: Open and Distance Learning, MOOCS, and Other Learning Assets for Theory and Practice.- Chapter 14: Social Online Learning: Leveraging Social Media and Web-Based Co-Creation to Drive Learning.- Chapter 15: The Role of Educational Technology on Mitigating the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Teaching and Learning.- Part 4: The Future and Research.- Chapter 16: The Unpredictable Future of High Fidelity Patient Simulation in Biomedical ScienceEducation: the Price Must Be Right.- Chapter 17: The Future with Extended Reality, Three-dimensional and Advanced Imaging for Molecules, Microscopy and Anatomy.- Chapter 18: The Future of Biomedical and Life Sciences Education: Evidence-based Future Directions.
Harry J. Witchel, Ph.D.Dr. Harry J. Witchel is Discipline
Leader in Physiology on the University of Sussex site of
Brightonand Sussex Medical School (UK). His team's
interdisciplinary research within the Department ofNeuroscience
there resulted in his students winning the Best Research Paper
Award at theinternational ECCE conference (2019); he also
researches and innovates on educational topicsrevolving around
human computer interaction and assessment. He has received over
15teaching awards and recognitions, including three at the national
level: from the British ScienceAssociation, the Physiological
Society, and most recently a National Teaching Fellowship
fromAdvanceHE (2021). He is a long-standing member of the
Physiological Society, where hecurrently serves on the Education,
Public Engagement and Policy Committee. His teachingqualification
is as a Senior Fellow (Higher Education Academy); he received his
A.B. (College) inBiophysics from Columbia University (New York),
and his Ph.D. from the Department ofPhysiology-Anatomy at the
University of California at Berkeley.
Michael W. Lee, Ph.D.Dr. Michael W. Lee received his Masters
and Doctoral degrees in Medical Science, with a focuson Medical
Pharmacology, from the Morsani College of Medicine at the
University of SouthFlorida. This was followed by a post-doctoral
fellowship at the University of Florida College ofMedicine at the
Shands Cancer Center. He has served as a founding faculty member at
severalpharmacy and medical schools where he has trained students
both in the classroom and in thelaboratory. He is currently an
Associate Professor at the University of Texas at Austin
DellMedical School in the departments of Medical Education and
Oncology. He is also an AssociateMember at the Live Strong Cancer
Institutes. His research interests center around
delineatingmolecular mechcnisms of therapeutic agents for cancer
and on development of noveleducational technology tools for
enhancing basic science learning. He has received numerousawards
for teaching including a Golden Apple (2011), a Recognition of
Innovation award (2011),and he has been awarded excellence in
teaching awards three consecutive years (2019, 2020,and 2021). In
2020 he was awarded the designation of Distinguished Teaching
Professor,following admittance into the University of Texas at
Austin Dell Medical School Academy ofDistinguished Educators. He is
an active member of the International Association of MedicalScience
Educators (IAMSE), the American Physiological Society (APS), and he
serves on theeditorial board of the journal Pharmacology Research
and Perspectives.
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