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An evaluation of best practices in an air quality student science project in Ethiopia

Dingemanse, Johannes Dirk LU orcid and Dingemanse-de Wit, Geertje (2022) In Aquademia 6(1).
Abstract
A science project as part of a student’s curriculum, which we call student science, might be the answer to two problems for a low-income country like Ethiopia: conventional science can be expensive and many students lack training in practical skills. Earlier studies have been conducted with respect to lay people (citizens or students) conducting (parts of) research (e.g. citizen science), but rarely in the context of a public university in a low-income country. A student science project at Arba Minch University (Ethiopia) has been evaluated in three steps. Firstly, best practices for student science projects are derived from the literature. Secondly, it is evaluated to what extent these best practices were executed in an air quality... (More)
A science project as part of a student’s curriculum, which we call student science, might be the answer to two problems for a low-income country like Ethiopia: conventional science can be expensive and many students lack training in practical skills. Earlier studies have been conducted with respect to lay people (citizens or students) conducting (parts of) research (e.g. citizen science), but rarely in the context of a public university in a low-income country. A student science project at Arba Minch University (Ethiopia) has been evaluated in three steps. Firstly, best practices for student science projects are derived from the literature. Secondly, it is evaluated to what extent these best practices were executed in an air quality student science project executed by 33 groups of undergraduate students at Arba Minch University. Thirdly, the scientific contribution of the project is evaluated by assessing the quality of the data in comparison to studies in similar scenarios, as well as its relation to a knowledge gap and a problem for the community. We find that the best practices from earlier studies are feasible in the study context. Furthermore, we find a scientific contribution, as most of the students’ work resulted in quality data that relates to knowledge gaps which are a problem for the Arba Minch community. Student science at a public university in a low-income country is feasible and can, as such, serve both scientific and educational needs. It is recommended that public universities in low-income contexts implement part of their curriculum goals in such projects. (Less)
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author
and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Air quality, Campus exposure, Public university, Ethiopia, Student measurements, Practical university education, Citizen science, Student-teacher-scientist partnerships
in
Aquademia
volume
6
issue
1
article number
ep22001
pages
15 pages
DOI
10.21601/aquademia/11828
project
Low-cost research methods in Ethiopia
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
562260af-7d54-48dc-8f07-d1d81e9f5cba
date added to LUP
2024-10-25 07:28:22
date last changed
2025-04-04 15:09:29
@article{562260af-7d54-48dc-8f07-d1d81e9f5cba,
  abstract     = {{A science project as part of a student’s curriculum, which we call student science, might be the answer to two problems for a low-income country like Ethiopia: conventional science can be expensive and many students lack training in practical skills. Earlier studies have been conducted with respect to lay people (citizens or students) conducting (parts of) research (e.g. citizen science), but rarely in the context of a public university in a low-income country. A student science project at Arba Minch University (Ethiopia) has been evaluated in three steps. Firstly, best practices for student science projects are derived from the literature. Secondly, it is evaluated to what extent these best practices were executed in an air quality student science project executed by 33 groups of undergraduate students at Arba Minch University. Thirdly, the scientific contribution of the project is evaluated by assessing the quality of the data in comparison to studies in similar scenarios, as well as its relation to a knowledge gap and a problem for the community. We find that the best practices from earlier studies are feasible in the study context. Furthermore, we find a scientific contribution, as most of the students’ work resulted in quality data that relates to knowledge gaps which are a problem for the Arba Minch community. Student science at a public university in a low-income country is feasible and can, as such, serve both scientific and educational needs. It is recommended that public universities in low-income contexts implement part of their curriculum goals in such projects.}},
  author       = {{Dingemanse, Johannes Dirk and Dingemanse-de Wit, Geertje}},
  keywords     = {{Air quality; Campus exposure; Public university; Ethiopia; Student measurements; Practical university education; Citizen science; Student-teacher-scientist partnerships}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  number       = {{1}},
  series       = {{Aquademia}},
  title        = {{An evaluation of best practices in an air quality student science project in Ethiopia}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.21601/aquademia/11828}},
  doi          = {{10.21601/aquademia/11828}},
  volume       = {{6}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}