Teaching An Experiential Field Course Via Online Participatory Science
Projects: A COVID-19 Case Study of a UC California Naturalist Course
Abstract
Experience and training in field work is a critical component of
undergraduate education in ecology, and many university courses
incorporate field-based or experiential components into the curriculum
in order to provide students hands-on experience. Due to the onset of
the COVID-19 pandemic and the sudden shift to remote instruction in the
spring of 2020, many instructors of such courses found themselves
struggling to identify strategies for developing rigorous field
activities that could be completed online, solo, and from a student’s
backyard. This case study illustrates the process by which one
field-based course, a UC California Naturalist certification course
offered at the University of California, Davis, transitioned to fully
remote instruction. The transition relied on established, publicly
available, online participatory science platforms (e.g., iNaturalist) to
which the students contributed data and observations remotely. Student
feedback on the course and voluntary continued engagement with the
participatory science platforms indicates that the student perspective
of the experience was on par with previous traditional offerings of the
course. This case study also includes topics and participatory science
resources for consideration by other faculty facing a similar transition
from group field activities to remote, individual field-based
experiences.