Integrating Digital Imaging Technology in the Undergraduate Biology Curriculum
        
        
        
        
 Students have long prepared free-hand drawings 
of objects viewed through a microscope. Microscope-mounted 35mm cameras offered 
a possibility to document images with clarity, but high costs in equipment, 
processing, and time make 35mm cameras somewhat impractical. Now, the digital 
camera is changing the picture in the undergraduate biology 
laboratory.
Students have long prepared free-hand drawings 
of objects viewed through a microscope. Microscope-mounted 35mm cameras offered 
a possibility to document images with clarity, but high costs in equipment, 
processing, and time make 35mm cameras somewhat impractical. Now, the digital 
camera is changing the picture in the undergraduate biology 
laboratory.
By Chris Sacchi, Anne Zayaitz, Wendy Ryan,  William Towne, and Carol Mapes
Digital cameras that produce images of excellent quality 
can provide instructors with the ability to introduce photography, at low or no 
per-image cost, into the undergraduate biology laboratory. And images produced 
by digital cameras can be downloaded to computers, where information about the 
organisms or structures under study can be analyzed more extensively using image 
analysis software designed for that purpose.
A Need for Digital Imaging Technology
In evaluating the 
biology courses at Kutztown University that students take to fulfill the 
requirements for B.S. degrees in Biology, Environmental Science, Marine Science, 
or Secondary Education-Biology, we found that a common concern was the need for 
students to acquire accurate information about visual materials and to extract 
course-appropriate information about those materials. Informally, students had 
expressed an interest in having more effective tools than hand-rendered drawings 
to aid them in learning about biology. The introduction of contemporary 
technological tools appeared to us to be the best means for students to 
accomplish the goal of recording and analyzing accurate images of visual 
materials.
     We felt that it would be appropriate to 
introduce students to the use of digital imaging technology from their first 
course in biology, the introductory Principles of Biology course, through the 
core program, including Introduction to Botany and Introduction to Zoology. 
Targeted upper-division subjects included Genetics, Microbiology, Plant 
Physiology, Marine Science, and others.  In all, we envisioned adapting 
eighteen microscope-based laboratory exercises, as well as independent study 
projects in thirteen courses. We planned for students to utilize the same 
technology in a variety of courses and to learn diverse applications for using 
digital image capture and analysis. In exploring how instructors at other 
colleges and universities were using digital imaging technology, we found that 
it was primarily used in upper-division courses, e.g., cell biology or 
histology. We believe that our expansion of digital imaging technology to the 
entire biology curriculum, our Biology Lab Adaptation and Digital Imaging 
Technology Project, represented a departure from these earlier 
uses.
     We have acquired a sufficient number of 
digital imaging workstations so that students, working in groups of up to three, 
can have hands-on access. A digital imaging workstation consists of a 
research-quality Nikon microscope equipped with a trinocular head adapted for 
use with a Nikon CoolPix990 digital camera, and a Pentium computer running MS 
Windows that is connected to a color inkjet printer.
The CoolPix990 camera is a 
consumer camera that can be readily adapted for use in the biology laboratory. 
For the undergraduate classroom, this camera and adapters were much more 
economical to acquire than digital cameras specifically designed for use with 
microscopes. Each computer is loaded with commercial software, including 
Microsoft Office 2000 Professional, Adobe Photoshop, and the Image Processing 
Toolkit, plus free image analysis software, Scion Image, which is adapted for 
use with PCs.
  Goals of the Biology Lab Adaptation and Digital 
  Imaging Technology Project
1. An important computer-assisted 
  technology will be used by the students in the preparation and analysis of 
  digital images of microscopic and macroscopic biological materials.
2. 
  Introduce students to the importance of collection, analysis, and presentation 
  of quantitative data.
3. Students will utilize computer software to prepare 
  labeled images of biological materials to develop a more complete 
  understanding of biological phenomena.
4. Students will develop the 
  necessary skills and will have the technological resources available to 
  prepare clear and thorough presentations of the results of laboratory 
  observations and experiments through written reports, poster presentations, 
  and oral presentations.
Labs Adapted
Lab exercises were adapted to enhance 
student learning in biology. From both faculty and student perspectives, digital 
technology has improved the traditional study of the cell cycle and mitosis in 
plant and animal cells.
     In the past, students would 
examine cross-section slides of onion root tips and white fish blastula to study 
the process of mitosis in a representative plant and animal. Students would 
sketch the stages of mitosis and, in the onion root tip, might have counted the 
number of cells in each stage of the cell cycle. When numbers were inconsistent 
with expectations, it was often difficult to determine why the counts were in 
error, e.g., did a student have difficulty in correctly identifying the stages 
of the cell cycle?
     With a digital imaging 
workstation, students capture images containing each stage of the cell cycle. 
They can upload the image to the computer, open it in Adobe Photoshop, crop the 
image to highlight a specific cell cycle stage, and then import the image into a 
MS Word document, where they can make a labeled diagram of the cell cycle-they 
do this for both plant and animal cells. For the portion of the exercise where 
the students count the number of plant cells in each cell cycle stage, they can 
record several images of the onion root tip using the camera. After downloading 
to the computer, students label each life cycle stage on a given image so that 
there can be agreement between student and instructor about the identity of 
these cell cycle stages. Further, when students are examining their images on 
the computer screen, they can share information and observations with their 
fellow students; the on-screen image is an invaluable teaching tool through 
which the students and the instructor can clarify their interpretations of which 
cell structures and life cycle stages are evident in the images.
Assessment and Outcomes
Periodically, software has locked 
up, necessitating the shutdown and restarting of computers. Continued efforts to 
deal promptly with technical problems by both faculty members and the 
Information Technology department are important to the successful introduction 
of technology into the undergraduate classroom.
Overall, the use of digital 
imaging technology in conjunction with standard software and image-processing 
software has led us to conclude that instruction in the biology laboratory is 
enhanced by this technology. While we have not evaluated whether students learn 
each subject more effectively now than prior to their use of the technology, we 
do have evidence from assessments that student attitudes about learning with 
digital imaging technology are very positive. 
Chris Sacchi, Ph.D., ([email protected]) is an assistant 
professor; Anne Zayaitz, Ph.D., is an associate professor; Wendy Ryan, Ph.D., is 
a professor; William Towne, Ph.D., is a professor; and Carol Mapes, Ph.D., is an 
associate professor, all in the Department of Biology at Kutztown 
University.
acknowledgments
Support for curriculum revision for this project was provided by the National 
Science Foundation’s Division of Undergraduate Education through the Course, 
Curriculum, and Laboratory Improvement program (Grant DUE-9952337) and Kutztown 
University.