Dear Colleagues,
As you make travel plans for the Ecological Society of America Meetings in
Sacramento, CA, we would like to draw your attention to our Organized Oral
Session highlighting the work of the Ecological Research and Education
Network (EREN) over the last four years of its five-year funding cycle as a
Research Coordination Network supported by the National Science
Foundation.  This session occurs Friday morning, August 15th (see the
information below) and we welcome your attendance and conversation.  To
learn more about EREN, and to join for free, go to www.erenweb.org.

Laurie Anderson, EREN Coordinator

OOS 51
The Ecological Research as Education Network (EREN): Merging Teaching and
Research Through Continental-scale Collaborative Projects
 Friday, August 15, 2014: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM
306, Sacramento Convention Center

 Organizer:
 Laurel J. Anderson
 Co-organizers:
 Bob Pohlad and Kathleen LoGiudice
 Moderator:
 Jose-Luis Machado

 The Ecological Research as Education Network (EREN) is a five-year project
funded by the National Science Foundation Research Coordination
Networks-Undergraduate Biology Education Program. Created by a team of
faculty from 14 undergraduate institutions, EREN’s mission is to create and
test models for collaborative ecological research that generate
high-quality, publishable data involving undergraduate students and faculty
across a continental-scale network of research sites. EREN works by
inviting faculty in the network to propose research projects that are
scientifically interesting, collaborative across sites and institutions,
appropriate for undergraduate participation, and feasible for institutions
with limited research resources. EREN facilitates online communication
between these “Lead Scientists” and network members, who then volunteer to
become collaborators on the project and engage their students in data
collection and analysis. EREN also provides funding for annual meetings
where project ideas, research protocols, pedagogical strategies, and
project data are discussed. There are currently 215 members of EREN
representing 160 different institutions, most of which are primarily
undergraduate institutions. According to a 2012 survey of EREN members,
1,349 students have been involved with data collection or used data from an
EREN project in courses, independent studies or summer research
experiences. This oral session will showcase the scientific and pedagogical
accomplishments of the EREN approach, and explore the diversity of ways
that the EREN model has been applied by different EREN Lead Scientists. Our
goal is to encourage other ecologists, at a wide range of institutions, to
consider the benefits of collaborative, large-scale ecological research in
both a scientific and pedagogical context, and yet to develop such projects
with an awareness of the challenges inherent to this approach. As such, our
talks will serve as diverse examples for other ecologists to build on and
learn from. An introductory talk will introduce the EREN model and provide
an overview and history of EREN as an organization. Each project-based talk
will discuss (1) the scientific basis of the project and how it exemplifies
the EREN model, (2) the number of faculty and student participants, (3)
project findings to date, (4) progress on assessing how the project has
affected student learning, (5) professional development opportunities the
project has provided to PUI faculty, and (6) the best aspects of the
project as well as challenges and lessons learned. A synthesis talk by the
EREN Leadership Team will conclude the session.

-- 
Laurie Anderson (Laurel J. Anderson)
Professor of Botany/Microbiology
Network Coordinator of the Ecological Research as Education Network (EREN)
Department of Botany/Microbiology
Ohio Wesleyan University
Delaware, OH 43015
740-368-3501
[email protected]

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