| Dr. Ron Kaufmann |
| Office: Shiley Center 277; x5904; kaufmann@sandiego.edu or rkaufmann@gmail.com |
| Tuesday & Thursday 8:00-10:30, or by appointment |
| WEEK | TOPICS | LECTURES | CHAPTERS |
| Sep 6 | Introduction, Biological Systems | Sep 6 | 1 |
|
Sep 11 Sep 13 |
Evolution,
Scientific Method
Characteristics of Living Organisms |
1
5, 17 |
|
|
Sep 18 Sep 20 |
Early Earth,
Origins of Life
History of Evolutionary Thought |
26
22 Miller SOM |
|
|
Sep 25 Sep 27 |
Evolutionary Theory Cell Cycle, Mitosis |
22
12 |
|
|
Oct 2 |
Cell Cycle, Meiosis
Midterm Exam #1 |
13 1, 5, 12, 13, 17, 22, 26 |
|
|
Oct 9 |
Principles
of Inheritance
Mendelian Genetics |
14
14, 15 |
|
|
Oct 16 Oct 18 |
Linkage,
Recombination Population Genetics Problem Sets #1 #2 #3 |
15
23 |
|
|
Oct 23 Oct 25 |
FIRES - No Class |
||
|
Oct 30 Nov 1 |
Microevolution
Microevolution |
23
23 |
|
|
Nov 6 Nov 8 |
Macroevolution Macroevolution |
24
24 |
|
|
Nov 13 Nov 15 |
Systematics,
Biogeography Midterm Exam #2 |
25 14, 15, 23, 24, 25 |
|
|
Nov 20 Nov 22 |
Introduction to Ecology
Thanksgiving - No Class |
|
50
|
|
Nov 27 Nov 29 |
Population Ecology
Population Ecology |
52
52 |
|
|
Dec 4 Dec 6 |
Community Ecology
Community Ecology |
53
53 |
|
|
Dec 11 Dec 13 |
Ecosystems
Conservation Biology |
54
55 |
FINAL EXAM Tuesday, December 18, 11:00-1:00 Review Sheet
Text: Biology, Seventh Edition, Campbell and Reece
Additional, required readings may be assigned during the semester.
Grades
| Midterm Exams (2) |
100 points
|
each |
| Final Exam (non-cumulative portion) |
100 points
|
|
| Final Exam (cumulative portion) |
50 points
|
|
| Homework, Participation, FRESH@USD |
100 points
|
|
| TOTAL |
450 points
|
Objectives
The goal of this course is to
introduce
you to the basic principles and processes of genetics, ecology and
evolutionary
biology. For each topic we cover I will try to present you with
the
underlying theory as well as relevant terminology and specific examples
that illustrate each theory. Many of the topics treated in this course
relate directly to areas of current concern, including genetic
engineering,
human cloning, habitat degradation and loss, declining biodiversity,
the
discovery of new and important fossil species, and the ecological
effects
of climate change. These issues are covered regularly by the
media,
and it is my hope that you will encounter stories that connect to the
material
we cover during the semester. If you encounter an interesting
story
that connects well to the course material, I hope you'll share that
information
with the rest of the class.
This course covers a lot of information, which can pile up quickly if you’re not careful. If you attend lectures, follow the book, and pay attention in lecture, you should be able to keep up. I expect that this class will be challenging; I hope you also find it to be interesting and fun. If you are having trouble or are concerned about your performance in this course, please contact me as soon as possible. I will try my best to answer your questions and help you succeed. Besides coming to my office hours, the best way to reach me is by e-mail or through my IM account (rskusd), if I'm online.
Exams
There will be NO
make-up exams in this course without prior approval from the
instructor.
This means that if you give me enough advance notice and there is a
compelling
reason why you must miss a scheduled exam we can probably work
something
out. If you wait until the last minute before telling me that you
can't make it to an exam I'm likely to be much less forgiving.
Travel
plans do NOT constitute a valid
excuse
for missing ANY exam. If
there
is an emergency that prevents you from taking an exam, please contact
the
instructor PRIOR to the exam
time.
This policy includes the final exam.
Homework
This class will include two graded
homework assignments, each consisting of a set of problems designed to
help you
solidify your understanding of genetics and inheritance. The
assignments
will cover some material for the second midterm; both will be returned
to you with grades and comments before the second exam.
Participation
Class attendance and participation
are important components of the learning experience. As a
university student you are responsible for your own attendance and
conduct. I will not take attendance in class. However, if
you do not show up regularly or if you consistently arrive late, your
final grade may suffer as a result. Participation in class
includes asking questions, being involved in discussions, and generally
behaving like a real, live, interested, person. If you tend to be
shy by nature, don’t worry: I don’t expect each of you to ask three
questions every day (that would be 60 questions a day!).
However, if you go the entire semester without ever uttering a word in
class, you aren’t trying hard enough. If I go over material too
rapidly
or too slowly, or if I explain something that doesn’t make sense or
that
you don’t understand, please raise
your hand and bring the problem to my attention.
FRESH@USD
Program
The FRESH@USD
program consists of 40+ workshops designed to assist you with your
transition to college. Workshops cover a wide range of topics,
including academic, social, and personal issues. As part of this
course, you each will be required to attend a minimum of three
workshops during the course of the semester. For each workshop
you attend, please write a one-page summary (hard copy or by e-mail as
Word or WordPerfect documents) of each workshop, including (1) a brief
description of the subject being covered, (2) a brief critique of the
workshop itself (possibly including organization, coverage, atmosphere,
usefulness, etc.), and (3) how you feel the workshop connects to you
personally. Each summary will be due within one week of the
workshop on which it is based. These summaries don't have to be
literary masterpieces, but they should contain the results of thought
and insight on your part about the workshop and topic. A schedule
of workshops will be given to you before the semester; updates can be
found at the FRESH@USD
workshop web
site. You should register ahead of time for workshops that you plan to
attend at the FRESH@USD
registration web site. Please plan ahead and don't wait until the last week of
the semester to attend these workshops.
Extra Credit
In addition to the 450 "mandatory"
points, it will be possible to earn up to 25 extra credit points by
successfully
completing an additional assignment. Select an article on a
current
topic not covered in class but related to the course content.
After
having the article approved by the instructor, you should research the
topic and write a 4-6 page paper covering the subject. This
should
be written as a research paper, including a reference list and either
reference
citations in the text or footnotes. You may find some information
on the internet, but don't use web sites exclusively as your
references.
Completion of an extra credit paper is not sufficient to earn 25
points,
and substandard assignments will earn fewer extra credit points.
Extra credit papers may be handed in until 11:59 pm on the last day of
November
(Friday, Nov 30). Papers received after that time will not be
accepted.
Academic Integrity
The use of information from
published
sources can create some confusion about proper use and referencing of
material
that you did not generate yourself. Here are some guidelines to
help
you use but not misuse information produced by others. The only
substantial
writing you are likely to do for this class is an extra credit paper,
and
the academic integrity concept applies to that paper just as it would
to
a more substantial paper for any class. For writing assignments
in
general, it is expected that you will read publications and incorporate
into your papers some of the findings and ideas contained in those
published
works. When you refer to information generated by someone else,
it
is important to credit the source of that information. Commonly,
that credit comes in the form of a parenthetical citation. For
example:
Global climate change has been implicated in the decline of zooplankton biomass in the eastern Pacific during the second half of the 20th century (Roemmich and McGowan, 1995).This sentence contains a conclusion described by Roemmich and McGowan in a paper published in 1995. It could be appropriate for you to include a sentence like this in one of your papers, but since you didn’t perform the research that led to this conclusion you need to cite the people who did.
This page copyright 2005-2007 by
Ron Kaufmann
All rights reserved
Last modified 29 Oct 2007 by Ron
Kaufmann