BIOLOGY 122
GENERAL BIOLOGY
A. Catalog Entry
BIOL 122 General Biology
Three hours lecture; three hours laboratory. (4)
Prerequisites: BIOL 121
Intended for biology, medical technology, and other science majors, this course sequence is a foundation and a prerequisite for further study in biology. Students will learn principles underlying the unity and diversity of life. They will discover the major, overarching concepts in biology. In the laboratory students will be introduced to the methods of science and will apply them in a research setting. Students receiving credit for BIOL 121:122 may not receive credit for either BIOL 101:102 or BIOL 111:112.
B. Detailed Description of Course
The theme of Biology 122, the second course in the two-course sequence, is the Diversity of life’s adaptations. Evolution by natural selection will be the common thread running through both this course, and its prerequisite, Biology 121.
1. Diversity of Life – A Survey of the Kingdoms and Domains
a. The Prokaryotic Domains
b. The Kingdom or Kingdoms of Protists
c. The Fungi
d. The Plants
e. The Animals
2. Reproduction
a. Asexual
b. Sexual
c. Life Cycles
3. Development
a. Plant
b. Animal
4. Structure and Movement
a. Vascular Plants
b. Exoskeletons
c. Endoskeletons
d. Movement of Cells
e. Movement by Hydraulics –Plants and Animals
f. Movement by Muscles
5. Physiology
a. Homeostasis
b. Nutrition and Digestion
c. Gas Exchange
d. Osmoregulation and Excretion
e. Internal Transport
6. Internal Coordination
Hormones and Signaling Molecules –Plant and Animal
Nerves and Action Potentials
Nervous Systems
Brains
7. Sensation
a. Chemoreception – Smell and Taste
b. Light Detection and Vision
c. Hearing and Hair Cells
d. Touch and Surface Senses
e. Sensing Gravity, Magnetism, Heat, etc.
8. How Life Interacts
a. Populations
b. Communities
c. Interactions within Communities – Predators, Parasites, Symbionts
d. Avoiding Predators
e. Avoiding Disease – Immune Systems
f. Ecosystems
The exact order of topics will be at the discretion of the instructor.
Biology 122 is not intended to be a comprehensive survey of living organims and their physiology, but rather a basic survey, emphasizing the diversity of adaptations to the common problems of survival and reproduction.
Laboratory Topics
Two kinds of laboratory exercises will be used:
C. Detailed Description of Conduct of Course
The course will be taught in the lecture/laboratory format. Readings will include both the textbook and outside readings on biological topics. Depending on the instructor the lecture may be supplemented with individual problem solving, group problem solving, student poster or oral presentations, in-class writing, out-of-class writing assignments, and special presentations, demonstrations, and videos.
The laboratory component will be a significant portion of the learning experience. This component will include fieldwork as well as work in a laboratory setting. Asking biological questions in a way that can be answered by experiment or observation, designing experiments based on these questions, and carrying out the experiments, will be a major emphasis of the laboratory.
D. Student Goals and Objectives of the Course.
For a General Education Course, in addition to a statement of course-specific goals and objectives, include a description of the broad general education program goals and the goals established for the particular knowledge area of the program as these goals will be addressed in this course.
Goals specific to Biology 122:
Having successfully completed Biology 122 the student will
Goals common to Biology 121 and Biology 122:
Have successfully completed Biology 121:122 the student will
E. Assessment Measures.
For a General Education Course, in addition to a statement of course-specific assessment measures, include a description of the ways student learning will be assessed to determine fulfillment of the broad general education program goals and the goals established for the particular knowledge area of the program.
Methods of assessment will include written examinations, laboratory examinations, and assignments. Some component of the laboratory assessment will test the student’s ability to make measurements and use the equipment.
Assessment measures may also include evaluation of student presentations, evaluation of written assignments, graded homework, and quizzes, depending on the instructor.
F. Other Course Information
Depending on enrollment multiple instructors may teach the course in a given semester. They will try to coordinate, as much as possible, the content covered and the laboratory exercises.
The course may be team taught by two or more instructors on an occasional basis.
F. Review and Approval
September 2001 - Dr. Charles M. Neal, Chair
Department of Biology