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      Getting to Evo-Devo: Concepts and Challenges for Students Learning Evolutionary Developmental Biology

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          Abstract

          In this study we used surveys of evo-devo experts to identify the core concepts of evo-devo and outline an underlying conceptual framework. We also use interviews and surveys of conceptual difficulties with these concepts.

          Abstract

          To examine how well biology majors have achieved the necessary foundation in evolution, numerous studies have examined how students learn natural selection. However, no studies to date have examined how students learn developmental aspects of evolution (evo-devo). Although evo-devo plays an increasing role in undergraduate biology curricula, we find that instruction often addresses development cursorily, with most of the treatment embedded within instruction on evolution. Based on results of surveys and interviews with students, we suggest that teaching core concepts (CCs) within a framework that integrates supporting concepts (SCs) from both evolutionary and developmental biology can improve evo-devo instruction. We articulate CCs, SCs, and foundational concepts (FCs) that provide an integrative framework to help students master evo-devo concepts and to help educators address specific conceptual difficulties their students have with evo-devo. We then identify the difficulties that undergraduates have with these concepts. Most of these difficulties are of two types: those that are ubiquitous among students in all areas of biology and those that stem from an inadequate understanding of FCs from developmental, cell, and molecular biology.

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          Developmental plasticity and evolution

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            Qualitative evaluation and research methods

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              The theory of facilitated variation.

              This theory concerns the means by which animals generate phenotypic variation from genetic change. Most anatomical and physiological traits that have evolved since the Cambrian are, we propose, the result of regulatory changes in the usage of various members of a large set of conserved core components that function in development and physiology. Genetic change of the DNA sequences for regulatory elements of DNA, RNAs, and proteins leads to heritable regulatory change, which specifies new combinations of core components, operating in new amounts and states at new times and places in the animal. These new configurations of components comprise new traits. The number and kinds of regulatory changes needed for viable phenotypic variation are determined by the properties of the developmental and physiological processes in which core components serve, in particular by the processes' modularity, robustness, adaptability, capacity to engage in weak regulatory linkage, and exploratory behavior. These properties reduce the number of regulatory changes needed to generate viable selectable phenotypic variation, increase the variety of regulatory targets, reduce the lethality of genetic change, and increase the amount of genetic variation retained by a population. By such reductions and increases, the conserved core processes facilitate the generation of phenotypic variation, which selection thereafter converts to evolutionary and genetic change in the population. Thus, we call it a theory of facilitated phenotypic variation.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Monitoring Editor
                Journal
                CBE Life Sci Educ
                CBE-LSE
                CBE-LSE
                CBE-LSE
                CBE Life Sciences Education
                American Society for Cell Biology
                1931-7913
                1931-7913
                Fall 2013
                : 12
                : 3
                : 494-508
                Affiliations
                [1]*Department of Zoology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74074
                [2] Department of Biology, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010
                [3] §Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907
                [4] Northwest School, Seattle, WA 98122
                [5] School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington, Bothell, Bothell, WA 98011
                [6]**Department of Biology, University of Wisconsin at La Crosse, La Crosse, WI 54601
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to: Kathryn E. Perez ( kperez@ 123456uwlax.edu ).
                Article
                CBE-12-11-0203
                10.1187/cbe.12-11-0203
                3763016
                24006397
                31e73c0e-e2ae-4131-99d0-45a673a3f003
                © 2013 A. Hiatt et al. CBE—Life Sciences Education © 2013 The American Society for Cell Biology. This article is distributed by The American Society for Cell Biology under license from the author(s). It is available to the public under an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 3.0 Unported Creative Commons License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0).

                “ASCB®” and “The American Society for Cell Biology®” are registered trademarks of The American Society of Cell Biology.

                History
                : 27 November 2012
                : 27 March 2013
                : 2 April 2013
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                September 4, 2013

                Education
                Education

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