2009 Distinguished Teaching Professor: Bruce Ault
Bruce Ault's prior awards include Cincinnati Chemist of the Year from the Cincinnati Section of the American Chemical Society, the Distinguished Research Award from the Sigma Xi Society (Cincinnati Chapter) and the George Barbour Award for Promoting Good Faculty-Student Relations and Faculty Service Award from the University of Cincinnati. Since 1979, the National Science Foundation (NSF) has continuously funded his work. Now UC adds the Distinguished Teaching Professor Award to the list.
In the Company of Students
It is difficult to find Bruce Ault without students. Whenever two or more students are gathered theres Bruce Ault. Whether its directing the National Science Foundation-sponsored Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) program, pushing a cart for UCs Helping Hands to get students moved into the residence halls, creating projects for Women in Science and Engineerings Research Experiences for Women Undergraduates or helping with some of the many K12 outreach programs that the Chemistry Department offers, Ault seems to have a hand in it.
The students might not be chemistry majors or even UC students yet.
Our whole purpose for being here is the students, Ault says. Its why were here; its why we exist and its why we get to do the fun things we do.
It is thanks to one wonderful math teacher in California who believed that calculus did not belong in a high-school curriculum that the University of Cincinnati enjoys the benefit of Bruce Aults dedication to students developing a passion for chemistry instead of math.
Ault originally planned on majoring in math in college. He had done well in his high-school math courses and had a teacher whom he considered to be outstanding in most respects. But she did not feel that calculus belonged in high school. So he arrived at Cal Tech where everyone took the same set of first-year courses, regardless of major as a freshman with no background in calculus.
At Cal Tech there were also no grades freshman year, Ault says, smiling. All classes are pass/fail. I did pass, but it became apparent I wasnt going to be a math major. But what I did have was a wonderful Swiss chemistry teacher.
And that was Aults path to chemistry. Cal Tech also provided my first exposure to undergraduate research.
Ault is passionate about the value of research at the undergraduate level. He refers to an article he has just read in the Journal of Chemical Education.
The author asks Are we actually teaching science? Ault says. In class we teach them the steps of the scientific method that scientists go through: observation, question, hypothesis, prediction, test hypothesis. Then we spend most of our time teaching knowledge. But then the author asks, In what course do we teach the process? The answer is research.
Ault says that undergraduate research is a tremendous opportunity and should be required. As we revamp our curriculum it will be in many cases, he says. Research is the opportunity to do science, starting at the little kid level with discovery-based labs.
Research for many can be a career-determining experience Ault says. Many kids, myself included, have gone on to graduate school because of undergrad research, he says. It helps people make career decisions. It helps people make life decisions.
To Ault, teaching, conducting research and publishing are therefore intertwined and overlapping.
We teach the process of science through research and we teach the broader scientific community when we publish, he says.
One of Aults most passionate topics is the Chemistry Departments Research Experience for Undergraduates. Each summer under Aults direction, this program offers students from across the nation an opportunity to come study at the University of Cincinnati. UCs students are considered in the applicant pool along with all the others. Typically 250 students apply for 10 positions. It is very competitive.
We get applicants with GPAs of 3.9 to 4.0, Ault says. We might not take them. We ask Who will benefit the most from this opportunity? The kid with a 4.0 from Yale or Cornell has plenty of opportunity, but the student with a 3.8 from some smaller school with a less-established lab or no opportunity to do research at her home institution has more opportunity to maximize her learning.
Through the many conversations in the application process, again Ault is building relationships and reaching out to the students.
One young lady was not accepted for our REU but ended up coming here for grad school, Ault says.
Aults REU work is recognized at many levels. University of Arkansas Associate Professor David Paul was a graduate student in the Department of Chemistry who did not study under Bruce Ault but came to know him through the REU program.
Bruce is considered to be one of the leaders in the REU programs across the country, says. He specifically notes that Ault has one of the nations most creative and inclusive REU programs.
Undergraduate research also fits with the more active teaching paradigm, Ault points out.
Like my more senior colleagues, I have had to make the transition from lecture to more active and more interactive classroom activities, Ault says. Ive worked to change from being the sage on the stage to being the guide on the side, I suppose you could say. I often feel a twinge of guilt because its easy. I think, But Im being paid to teach! Then I correct myself. No Im being paid for them to learn.
Even before a course evaluation system was established within the Chemistry Department, Ault had been having his students evaluate his teaching for years. In the departments first year of its system, the departmental average was 4.9 out of a 6.0 scale; Aults score at 5.7 was the second highest in the department and tied for highest among those who taught undergraduates. (The undergraduate average score was 4.3.) Some of the students took the time to add comments:
- I never left class confused.
- Clearly, Dr. Ault knew what we were thinking and outlined what we were learning until we made the discovery ourselves.
- He made you feel like he wanted you to do well.
Ault notes that teaching is a much broader activity than often considered. Research brings more attention and funding to a university and is easier to measure. Imperfectly perhaps, he adds, but it is easily quantifiable we dont know how to measure teaching as effectively as we would like. Whats more, we dont know how to measure learning as well as we should. How do you measure what a student has learned?
At the University of Cincinnati, one easy way is to ask the student if he or she ever studied under Bruce Ault.
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