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Visualizing a Disease Outbreak Using ESRI Story Maps

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At the end of this activity, students will demonstrate their ability to understand basic principles of disease transmission, convey real epidemiological data as visual stories, and develop a plan to handle a “real” outbreak. Instructors may evaluate students’ knowledge and comprehension of the basic principles of disease transmission by analyzing how students’ initial and final hypotheses changed throughout the exercise, as well as by assessing the introductory section of their presentations. Students will demonstrate their ability to apply their understanding of disease ecology to a real situation by reporting how an outbreak evolved over time, expressed through dynamic maps in their presentations. Instructors may assess the students’ presentations for both Story Map accuracy and ability to synthesize information in order to create a plan to handle the outbreak. The “Guidelines for Student Assessment” in the Faculty Notes section explicitly link the initial skills outcomes with the learning objectives by providing several ways for students to demonstrate their learning of the skills.
Associated files
Format
Resource Group TIEE
Resource Group Link https://ecoed.esa.org/index.php?P=SearchResults&FK=TIEE
Primary or BEN resource type
Secondary resource type
Discipline Specific Core Concepts
General Biology Competencies
Life science discipline (subject)
Keywords Disease ecology, viral infections, spatio-temporal spread of disease, geographic information systems (GIS), epidemiology
Audience
Intended End User Role
Language
Educational Language
Pedagogical Use Category
Pedagogical Use Description Guided inquiry or open-ended inquiry, cooperative learning, critical thinking
Aggregation Level
Structure
Url https://www.esa.org/tiee/vol/v15/issues/data_sets/breitbart/abstract.h...
Full Name of Primary Author Sophie T. Breitbart
Primary Author Affiliation Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto
Primary Author email education@esa.org
Secondary Author Name(s) Emily Weigel
Secondary Author Affiliation(s) Department of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology
Added By Id
  • eduintern
Submitter Name ESA
Submitter Email education@esa.org
Rights All rights reserved. Fair use for educational purposes.
License
Publisher
Review type
Drought and Water Ecosystem Services Collection Off
Conservation Targets Under Global Change Collection Off
Big Data Collection Off
Editors Choice No
Resource Status
Date Of Record Submission 0000-00-00
Last Modified By Id
  • JJohnston
Date Last Modified 2019-10-07 07:47:45
Release Flag Published

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