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Engaging Students through Storytelling: A Fictitious Crime Project

Poster 8

5/21/24, 9:30 PM

Imagine the crime of the century down to the tiniest evidence collected and analyzed, tell your peers the story, then watch them solve the mystery.

Ioan Marginean

University of Baltimore

Keywords:

Storytelling, Stimulating Creativity, Critical Thinking

We present a framework to foster student creativity and critical thinking skills in a way that is both enjoyable and academically rigorous. The students must imagine a crime scenario as a pretext for exploring various scientific topics of their choice in a Forensic Science course. The project culminates with students presenting their fictitious crime investigation to their peers. The quality of student scenarios varied and correlated well with student performance in other aspects of the course. Most students enjoyed creating their crime scenarios and trying to solve the mystery behind the scenarios imagined by their peers.

Hear it from the author:

Engaging Students through Storytelling: A Fictitious Crime Project

Transcript:

This contribution describes a framework to foster creativity and critical thinking skills in students in a way that is both enjoyable and academically rigorous. The students are encouraged to imagine a crime scenario, as a pretext for exploring various scientific topics of their choice. The assignment empowers students to take charge of their own learning by focusing on a type of crime that they want to learn more about and describe its investigation. Throughout the semester, they practice divergent thinking and problem-solving as they consider various social and cultural factors that may affect their scenario. To ensure continuous progress, they provide information about their scenario for formative assessment throughout the semester. Shortly after the beginning of the semester, they choose a type of crime, its location, and the main characters involved (victim, investigative team, suspects). They eventually decide how the characters interact during the investigation, what evidence is recovered from the crime scene or from the suspects, how the evidence is collected and analyzed, and how the evidence leads to the apprehension of the perpetrator. Their plot must include two investigative errors, which challenges them to think what can go wrong during an investigation. The project culminates with students presenting their fictitious crime investigation in front of their peers. To practice analysis and evaluation skills, all students use a rubric to assess all presentations. The project has been assigned in an introductory Forensic Science course for three semesters so far. The quality of student scenarios varied and correlated reasonably well with the student performance in other aspects of the course. The students enjoyed creating their own crime scenarios and trying to solve the scenarios imagined by their peers while listening to their presentations.
References:

McDrury, J. & Alterio, M. (2004). Learning Through Storytelling in Higher Education: Using Reflection and Experience to Improve Learning. Taylor & Francis. 


Bracewell, T. E., & Jones, C. (2022). The use of simulated crime scenes in teaching undergraduate forensic sciences: Implementing an active learning approach to forensics. Science & Justice, 62(6), 758-767. 


Thompson, T. (2020). Choose your own murder: Non-linear narratives enhance student understanding in forensic science education. Forensic Science International: Synergy, 2, 82–85.

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