ASU expands hands-on lab opportunities for online biochemistry students


A group of people posing around the Arizona State University sign on the ASU Tempe campus with Old Main building in the background

ASU School of Molecular Sciences inaugural cohort of online students who came from across the country in the spring to conduct individualized analytical biochemistry laboratory experiments collaborate with one another and experience campus life. Photo courtesy Orenda Griffin

|

As a New York City autopsy research coordinator, Stephanie McQuillan saw her continued education as a gateway for career advancement.

Juggling full-time work in New York, McQuillan thrived in the flexible environment of Arizona State University’s online courses but was limited by when she could come to campus for her immersive in-person lab experience, traditionally only offered in the summer.

For the first time, ASU’s School of Molecular Sciences has expanded its analytical biochemistry hands-on laboratory opportunities for online students to be taken in the spring, summer and fall, with plans to expand further into additional nonmajor biochemistry lab offerings in the next academic year. 

Three people in lab gear working in a lab
Stephanie McQuillan in one of ASU's new biochemistry labs. Photo Courtesy Stephanie McQuillan

“I wanted to graduate as soon as possible to keep advancing my current career,” said McQuillan, who was part of the inaugural cohort of 16 ASU Online students who came from across the country to the Tempe campus in the spring to conduct individualized experiments, collaborate with one another and experience campus life.

“Coming to Arizona and taking my biochemistry lab in the spring was incredible; I'm now graduating earlier than I anticipated.” 

The expanded offering of ASU’s Analytical Biochemistry Laboratory 467 is part of a pilot program that not only provides more flexibility for online students to take lectures and lab courses concurrently, but also includes a new redesign of course curriculum and implements new experiments that leverage ASU’s newly renovated modern laboratories

“In addition to traditional instructional aspects, the new labs are designed to offer a research experience that otherwise would not be available for the online students,” said James Allen, professor in the School of Molecular Sciences who taught the spring lab and was involved in the redesign of the curriculum. “We’re not just offering more classes but seizing an opportunity and taking a fresh perspective on what has been done in the past.”

With hundreds of students in the biochemistry online program and growing, the School of Molecular Sciences plans to offer multiple sections of the course each semester, and to also start offering a nonmajors biochemistry lab course in the next academic year.

“This new initiative is a first step towards expanding the program beyond the constraints of summer, in service of the student’s needs and accommodating students’ differing career and employment requirements,” said Ian Gould, President's Professor in ASU’s School of Molecular Sciences and associate dean of online innovation in The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

“The School of Molecular Sciences and ASU are prepared to go to great lengths to make it as accessible as possible for students to earn their degrees. This (effort) is student focused to an extreme degree.”

More Science and technology

 

Portrait of Shaopeng Wang.

Will this antibiotic work? ASU scientists develop rapid bacterial tests

Bacteria multiply at an astonishing rate, sometimes doubling in number in under four minutes. Imagine a doctor faced with a patient showing severe signs of infection. As they sift through test…

Photo of a 3D model of bacteria.

ASU researcher part of team discovering ways to fight drug-resistant bacteria

A new study published in the Science Advances journal featuring Arizona State University researchers has found vulnerabilities in certain strains of bacteria that are antibiotic resistant, just…

Two scientists in a lab observe a microchip.

ASU student researchers get early, hands-on experience in engineering research

Using computer science to aid endangered species reintroduction, enhance software engineering education and improve semiconductor material performance are just some of the ways Arizona State…