National Initiative Launched to Change the Way Biology Departments Approach 
Undergraduate Education
PULSE program seeks faculty to help lead systemic change


A new national initiative promises to improve college biology education by 
engaging faculty members in an effort to change how post-secondary life 
sciences departments approach education. PULSE, which stands for Partnership 
for Undergraduate Life Sciences Education, is a collaborative effort funded by 
the National Science Foundation (NSF), National Institutes of Health (NIH), and 
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI). Program organizers also announced 
today that they are accepting applications from faculty members interested in 
becoming Vision and Change Leadership Fellows – individuals who will lead a 
national effort to stimulate systemic change in how post-secondary educational 
institutions approach biology education. The intent of the program is to 
develop a strategy to implement the findings from a 2011 report.

College students and faculty members have long argued that the approach to 
undergraduate education in the life sciences should be modernized to reflect 
what we now understand about how students learn. Twenty-first century science 
demands that students develop scientific and technical skills, and also the 
capacity to work beyond traditional academic boundaries. Undergraduate 
students, regardless of their major, deserve and need a life sciences education 
that helps then understand biology and how scientific research is conducted. 
Informed decision-making, whether managing one’s health, deciding what food to 
eat, or understanding how individual actions influence the environment, 
requires an appreciation of the nature of science.

In 2006, the NSF initiated a multi-year conversation with the scientific 
community, with assistance from the American Association for the Advancement of 
Science. That dialogue, which was co-funded with the National Institutes of 
Health and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, generated the 2011 report, 
Vision and Change in Undergraduate Biology Education: A Call to Action .

The scientific community actively informed the recommendations in the Vision 
and Change report. Among these were a recognition that a 21 st century 
education requires changes to how biology is taught, how academic departments 
support faculty, and how curricular decisions are made.

“There is now broad consensus about the change that is needed,” said HHMI’s 
Cynthia Bauerle. The way biology is taught needs to change in order to “spark 
student interest in science and prepare them for the challenging scientific 
problems we face in the 21 st century.”

Prior efforts to reform post-secondary life sciences education have focused on 
helping individual faculty members improve their teaching methods. These 
initiatives have created points of excellence at institutions across the 
country, but have failed to produce the systemic change that is needed to 
fundamentally improve college-level biology education.

To foster this widespread change, the NSF, NIH, and HHMI have partnered to 
launch the PULSE program. Supporting the effort are Knowinnovation and the 
American Institute of Biological Sciences.

The PULSE initiative will facilitate the systemic change that was identified as 
a national priority in the Vision and Change report.

Clifton A. Poodry of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the 
division of NIH providing funding to PULSE, notes that NIH has a long-standing 
commitment to training the next generation. “We look forward to furthering this 
goal through our partnership with NSF and HHMI to implement recommendations of 
the Vision and Change report for improving undergraduate biology education," 
said Poodry.

This year PULSE will select 40 Vision and Change Leadership Fellows. The 
selection process will identify individuals experienced in catalyzing 
undergraduate biology education reform at institutional, departmental, or 
divisional levels in the nation’s colleges and universities. The Fellows will 
represent research universities, regional or comprehensive universities, 
liberal arts colleges, and community colleges. The Fellows will be engaged in a 
yearlong effort to develop an implementation strategy for the Vision and Change 
report.

“What we are trying to achieve is systemic change, transformation of 
undergraduate biology education in this country,” stated Judith Verbeke of the 
NSF. This is why the PULSE effort is encouraging current or former biology 
department heads to apply. “The focus is intentional,” said Verbeke, “because 
it's at the level of the department that so many decisions are made. We are 
looking to the department as the most appropriate unit to make real change.”

Ideal applicants will be aware of the history and discourse of reforming 
undergraduate life sciences education; have undergraduate teaching experience 
as well as experience mentoring, motivating and evaluating other faculty; and 
will have experience as current or former chairs or department heads. 
Applicants should be active in cultivating the mix of scholarship in teaching 
and life sciences research appropriate to their type of institution. Successful 
candidates will have a record of working collaboratively and creatively with 
individuals from different backgrounds.

It is through diversity of perspective that we achieve change, Bauerle said, 
“We seek not only those who are already members of the choir, but also 
committed life scientists and educators who question how best to proceed.”

Applications for the Vision and Change Leadership Fellows program will be 
accepted through July 9, 2012. Information about the PULSE program, including 
application guidelines, is available at www.pulsecommunity.org . The Vision and 
Change report is online at http://visionandchange.org/finalreport . 




Julie Palakovich Carr
Senior Public Policy Associate
American Institute of Biological Sciences
1444 I Street, NW Suite 200
Washington, DC 20005
202-568-8117
www.aibs.org

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