John Taylor

Associate Professor of Biology

  • Cedar City UT UNITED STATES

Specializing in bat research, collegiate program development, STEM education, and professional development

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Biography

Dr. John Taylor is an associate professor of biology at Southern Utah University whose research centers on the study of bats living in mines and at Utah national parks. In addition to conducting research and teaching biology courses, Dr. Taylor is assistant dean of Integrative Learning where he supervises SUU’s innovative general education program, Jumpstart.

Dr. Taylor also has an extensive range of service in the state of Utah, involving science education, government committees on education, and working with the National Science Teachers Association. He serves as president of the Utah Science Teachers Association, which supports more than 1,000 teacher-members, and serves as vice chairman for the Zion National Park Forever Project, an official nonprofit partner of Zion National Park. In this capacity, he helps guide the operation of philanthropic endeavors, natural history education, and the general business, supplying Zion National Park with millions in external funding for park operations.

An SUU alumnus, Dr. Taylor graduated with a bachelor’s degree in biology/zoology. He furthered his education earning a master’s degree in zoology from Brigham Young University and a Ph.D. in science education at Syracuse University. Previously, he taught general biology courses for Utah Valley University.

Social

Industry Expertise

Training and Development
Program Development
Education/Learning
Research

Areas of Expertise

Bat Behavior
Bat Research
Biological Education
Collegiate Program Development
Evolutionary Biology
General Education Design and Implementation
Herpetology
Impact of Biological Problems on Human Affairs
STEM Education and Policy
STEM participation

Education

Southern Utah University

B.S.

Biology/Zoology

Brigham Young University

M.S.

Zoology

Syracuse University

Ph.D.

Science Education

Accomplishments

President of the Utah Science Teachers Association

2010-Present
The Utah Science Teachers Association is a group of educators with members ranging from elementary teachers, middle school teachers, and high school teachers to university professors and members of the science industry. The organization's goal is to better science education in the state of Utah.

GE Assessment Design and Implementation

Designed and implemented a campus-wide assessment program using the CANVAS LMS. This program relied on the adoption of the AAC&U's Essential Learning Outcomes by the 150+ SUU General Education faculty. In one year's time, well over half of the faculty have successfully included the assigned ELOs into their courses and assessed the students using the new system.

Jumpstart GE

What's different about about Jumpstart? Everything. Imagine 50 students, 8 faculty, 34 credits, and 1 amazing educational experience. John Taylor designed and implemented an entire GE curriculum to become fully integrated within a one-year time span.

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Affiliations

  • National Science Teachers Association
  • Zion Natural History Association
  • North Elementary/SUU Partnership
  • General Education Committee
  • iPadagogy Committee
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Media Appearances

This is how Southern Utah University is making general ed matter: Jumpstart

St George News  online

2018-02-10

One large change that occurred this year was the removal of the math requirement included in previous years.
“That one little tweak to the system helped a ton and it is probably the biggest change we made this year,” Taylor said. “More and more of our incoming freshmen are coming to us with varying needs mathematically. Some students may need remedial work, while others have already completed calculus in high school.”

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SUU Expanding Jumpstart GE Program

The Spectrum  online

2016-03-19

Eight professors teach the Jumpstart General Education program on common core college classes with a spin: they do it together.
Taylor said the theme of the year, Freedom, is broken down into sub-themes, the first entitled Me.
“So the students explore: what makes me? Why do I listen to the music that I do? Stuff like that.” he said. “I taught them all about the human body because I teach biology and that overlaps with psychology that professor brought in the mind and where does the personality come from. Then the chemistry professor would jump in helping me help the students understand the chemistry of the human body.”

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Eight Professors, 43 Students

Inside Higher Ed  online

2015-11-06

Despite calls by many to improve general education, including a decades-long push by the Association of American Colleges and Universities, colleges have an incentive not to mess with status quo. That’s because general education courses are generally cheap to teach.
“They’re treated as a revenue builder by most universities,” said John Taylor, an associate professor of biology and faculty fellow for academic affairs in the provost's office at Southern Utah, a public university located in the largely rural southwest corner of the state.

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Research Grants

Implement Cooperative Study to Understand Bat Ecology of Pipe Spring National Monument (PISP) and the Kaibab Paiute Reservation

National Park Service

2010

Distribution and Relative Abundance of Chiroptera in Western Beaver and Washington Counties, Utah

Endangered Species Mitigation Fund

2006
Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Distribution and Relative Abundance of Chiroptera in Western Iron County, Utah

Endangered Species Mitigation Fund

2005
Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

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Articles

How To Do It: A Simple Inquiry-Based Lab for Teaching Osmosis

The American Biology Teacher

2014-04-04

This simple inquiry-based lab was designed to teach the principle of osmosis while also providing an experience for students to use the skills and practices commonly found in science. Students first design their own experiment using very basic equipment and supplies, which generally results in mixed, but mostly poor, outcomes. Classroom “talk and argument” is then used to determine how their experiments could be changed to gather more reliable data. The final assessment consists of both formal and subjective testing, requiring students to explain their design choices.

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Bat research and interpretive programming: Increasing public interest in Pipe Spring National Monument

Park Science

2015-09-14

Bat surveys at the monument have been going on for more than 30 years, but nearly all of this work has taken place from June through August, the peak time for bat activity (Kim and Johnson 2004; Johnson 2005; and Tyburec 2011). To identify optimal timing for pond maintenance, surveys needed to begin in early spring, when migratory bat species arrive at the monument, and continue until late November, when their activity sharply declines. Our intention was to determine whether some bat species use the ponds year-round or they only rely on the ponds in the hot summer months. We also wanted to know how much seasonal variation in use by different bat species exists.

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The Voyager Problem: The effect of a science laboratory course focused on clinical teaching experiences

Science Teaching - Dissertations and Theses

A unique biological laboratory experience was created that fused together biological content learned in a General Education introductory biology course with content pedagogy and clinical experiences. The intent of the course was to measure the participants self-efficacy levels and biological content knowledge through the use of pre- and post-test assessments and interviews. Seven freshmen pre-service elementary students were enrolled in a biology laboratory section that spent significant amounts of time learning biological content and developing age-level appropriate lessons to teach that biological content knowledge to elementary-aged children. The freshmen students were paired with senior pre-service teachers. These teams then traveled to participating K-6 elementary schools and performed a total of four Kid's College events. A Kid's College event consisted of the entire elementary school participating in three, thirty-minute science experiences with seven-minute breaks in between. This Voyager/Kid's College experience took place at four different elementary schools throughout the semester. Despite a reduced amount of biological content within the laboratory section, the Voyager Program freshmen performed as well as other education majors within the same biology lecture course. Additionally, the freshmen participant's self-efficacy and biological content knowledge were assessed at the beginning and end of the semester. The findings suggest that this method of pairing freshmen and seniors together in clinical experiences significantly increased self-efficacy and confidence in teaching biological topics and can serve as a useful model to teacher preparation programs seeking to incorporate clinical experiences into currently existing science courses.

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Courses

BIOL 1010/15 Principles of Biology

Non-majors course in biology emphasizing mechanisms of living systems and impact of biological problems on human affairs. Course is designed to foster critical thinking, problem solving and the application of scientific thinking in biology.

BIOL 1020/25 Human Biology

Designed for non-biology majors seeking a basic introduction to human anatomy and physiology. Outlines the basic structure and function of the body from cellular to system levels.

BIOL 1610/15 General Biology I

It provides a basic foundation in the areas of biochemistry, organization and function of cells as well as the transmission of genetic information.

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