ENGAGING LEARNERS WITH A WEB-BASED INTRODUCTION TO THE CARBON CYCLE
Web-based instruction is designed to encourage students to learn independently and provides opportunities for extended, flexible learning beyond the classroom or laboratory. Research has documented the value of computer visualization for enhancing the presentation of complex or abstract content. Complex phenomena involving movement are part of students' everyday experiences, however, explanations are neither easily visualized nor commonly understood within static figures. Computer simulations and interactive animations provide learners with a better visual representation of scientific concepts. Furthermore, they enable learners to manipulate the components of a phenomenon, thus providing opportunities to pose questions, manipulate variables and formulate conclusions.
We developed Web-based instructional modules (www.ei.lehigh.edu/esse/) that use driving questions to enhance student conceptualization and understanding of the global carbon cycle. Flash-based animations assist the learner's understanding about carbon cycling at various temporal and spatial scales and through each significant Earth reservoir. These materials can be incorporated into a variety of undergraduate courses. At Lehigh, learners explore the paradigm of the missing- terrestrial sink of carbon and the role of forest recovery and urbanization using the Lehigh Valley of Pennsylvania as a case study in an introductory Earth & Environmental Science laboratory course.