News and Information
8/15/2010
Summer 'Whodunit' Sets Stage for New Course

It is a scenic drive down a winding country highway to Augusta, Mo., where Maryville University owns 92 acres of land. With
its fields, fish-filled creeks and densely wooded
forests, the property is a perfect place for faculty and students to
engage in biological and ecological research. This summer, however, it
made the perfect environment for a fake "crime" scene.
The idea was developed by Geriann Brandt, assistant professor of criminal justice/criminology, Russell Blaine, PhD, assistant professor of biology and Mary Carol Parker, JD,
assistant professor of legal studies. In order to create a course for
students interested in learning the complexities behind forensic science
and legal studies, the team developed a multi-disciplinary program that
follows a murder case from crime scene to courtroom.
The three-week course, which will be offered next summer, is designed to give students hands-on experience collecting evidence from a crime scene,
examining DNA in a lab and holding a trial in a mock court. This course is cross-listed with the criminal justice, biology and legal studies programs.
"We started with an introduction class that I currently teach and
took it one step further,"
Brandt said. "The course is called Advanced Criminal
Investigation and is a multi-disciplinary look at approaching a crime
scene from the criminal justice side to the biological side and then the
legal side."
This summer, Brandt, Blaine and Parker set up a trial run for the
course. After leaving a deceased pig buried in a mock crime scene on the
Augusta property for approximately three weeks, the group returned to
collect biological and entomological samples. Tissue from the animal was
preserved in small test tubes filled with ethyl alcohol; flies,
beetles and maggots were captured in jars. The samples were then taken
back to the research lab on campus and prepared for testing.
"Decomposed tissue and entomological samples can give a great many
details about a crime scene," Blaine said. "We can estimate time of
death within about 24 hours by raising larvae specimens to adulthood. We
then use tissue samples from the carcass to extract DNA and identify
the body. This is going to give students a chance to work with some real
forensic science and forensic entomology."
Once they have documented all of the physical evidence, the
professors will be able to determine what should be available for the
students to collect and examine. This will further determine what
evidence can be presented in a mock trial.
"We want students to understand what really happens with forensic
science, not just what happens in a 60-minute crime show," Parker said.
"Students in all three disciplines need to understand how the evidence
is collected, how it's treated and how it's presented in trial. The
legal studies aspect of the course will develop their oral advocacy
skills and show them how a trial really proceeds."
Funded
by a grant from Maryville's Center for Teaching and Learning, the team expects
to use their project this summer to not only fine tune their new
course, but also expand their teaching skills. As the
trial run moves forward, each professor is responsible for instructing
the other two in their area of expertise.
"We are certainly getting out of our comfort zone here,"
Parker said. "We're learning procedures and terminology that
we're not familiar with. We didn't think about teaching each
other in our own discipline and I think we've really developed an
appreciation for each other's style. That has been the biggest eye-opening experience so far."
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