ZOOLOGY 101/BIOLOGY FALL 2017 Section 1: MWF 11 AM, 272 Bascom; Section 2: MWF 12:05, 272 Bascom

Similar documents
Biology 1 General Biology, Lecture Sections: 47231, and Fall 2017

Biology 10 - Introduction to the Principles of Biology Spring 2017

BIOS 104 Biology for Non-Science Majors Spring 2016 CRN Course Syllabus

Prerequisite: General Biology 107 (UE) and 107L (UE) with a grade of C- or better. Chemistry 118 (UE) and 118L (UE) or permission of instructor.

BIOL 2421 Microbiology Course Syllabus:

Instructor: Khaled Kassem (Mr. K) Classroom: C Use the message tool within UNM LEARN, or

Phone: Office Hours: 10:00-11:30 a.m. Mondays & Wednesdays

Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF am 105 Chambliss

CHEMISTRY 104 FALL Lecture 1: TR 9:30-10:45 a.m. in Chem 1351 Lecture 2: TR 1:00-2:15 p.m. in Chem 1361

Biology 32 Human Anatomy & Physiology I Bakersfield College Fall 2017

General Microbiology (BIOL ) Course Syllabus

Heredity In Plants For 2nd Grade

GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY (BIOL 021 ISP)

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

Grading Policy/Evaluation: The grades will be counted in the following way: Quizzes 30% Tests 40% Final Exam: 30%

HUMAN ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY II

Dr. Zhang Fall 12 Public Speaking 1. Required Text: Hamilton, G. (2010). Public speaking for college and careers (9th Ed.). New York: McGraw- Hill.

PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006

We will use the text, Lehninger: Principles of Biochemistry, as the primary supplement to topics presented in lecture.

Nutrition 10 Contemporary Nutrition WINTER 2016

Mastering Biology Test Answers

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

Class Meeting Time and Place: Section 3: MTWF10:00-10:50 TILT 221

FINN FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Spring 2014

BI408-01: Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology

PBHL HEALTH ECONOMICS I COURSE SYLLABUS Winter Quarter Fridays, 11:00 am - 1:50 pm Pearlstein 308

Office: CLSB 5S 066 (via South Tower elevators)

Psychology 101(3cr): Introduction to Psychology (Summer 2016) Monday - Thursday 4:00-5:50pm - Gruening 413

BIODIVERSITY: CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES, AND CONSERVATION

Instructor Dr. Kimberly D. Schurmeier

Human Development: Life Span Spring 2017 Syllabus Psych 220 (Section 002) M/W 4:00-6:30PM, 120 MARB

Introduction to Forensic Anthropology ASM 275, Section 1737, Glendale Community College, Fall 2008

Elementary Organic & Biological Chemistry, BCH3023

INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA Course Syllabus

MAR Environmental Problems & Solutions. Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS)

Jeff Walker Office location: Science 476C (I have a phone but is preferred) 1 Course Information. 2 Course Description

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra

CHEM 1105: SURVEY OF GENERAL CHEMISTRY LABORATORY COURSE INFORMATION

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

Introduction to Forensic Drug Chemistry

POLSC& 203 International Relations Spring 2012

Physics XL 6B Reg# # Units: 5. Office Hour: Tuesday 5 pm to 7:30 pm; Wednesday 5 pm to 6:15 pm

INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PROFESSIONS HHS CREDITS FALL 2012 SYLLABUS

Indiana University Northwest Chemistry C110 Chemistry of Life

Class Mondays & Wednesdays 11:00 am - 12:15 pm Rowe 161. Office Mondays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

Biology Keystone Questions And Answers

GAT General (Analytical Reasoning Section) NOTE: This is GAT-C where: English-40%, Analytical Reasoning-30%, Quantitative-30% GAT

PHO 1110 Basic Photography for Photographers. Instructor Information: Materials:

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY HS3410 RN-BSN, Spring Semester, 2016

CS 3516: Computer Networks

Required Materials: The Elements of Design, Third Edition; Poppy Evans & Mark A. Thomas; ISBN GB+ flash/jump drive

Department of Anthropology ANTH 1027A/001: Introduction to Linguistics Dr. Olga Kharytonava Course Outline Fall 2017

Neuroscience I. BIOS/PHIL/PSCH 484 MWF 1:00-1:50 Lecture Center F6. Fall credit hours

BIOL Nutrition and Diet Therapy Blinn College-Bryan Campus Course Syllabus Spring 2011

Spring 2016 Stony Brook University Instructor: Dr. Paul Fodor

State University of New York at Buffalo INTRODUCTION TO STATISTICS PSC 408 Fall 2015 M,W,F 1-1:50 NSC 210

Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology Curriculum

Astronomy/Physics 1404 Introductory Astronomy II Course Syllabus

Class Tuesdays & Thursdays 12:30-1:45 pm Friday 107. Office Tuesdays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

CHEM 6487: Problem Seminar in Inorganic Chemistry Spring 2010

BUSINESS FINANCE 4265 Financial Institutions

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017

*In Ancient Greek: *In English: micro = small macro = large economia = management of the household or family

GENERAL CHEMISTRY I, CHEM 1100 SPRING 2014

CROP GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT (AND IMPROVEMENT)

Program Alignment Worksheet High School

ACC : Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2011, MW 3:30-4:45 p.m. Bryan 202

CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017)

BUS Computer Concepts and Applications for Business Fall 2012

The Policymaking Process Course Syllabus

Spring 2014 SYLLABUS Michigan State University STT 430: Probability and Statistics for Engineering

Medical Terminology - Mdca 1313 Course Syllabus: Summer 2017

IPHY 3410 Section 1 - Introduction to Human Anatomy Lecture Syllabus (Spring, 2017)

Prokaryotic/Eukaryotic Cells Lesson Plan ETPT 2020:008 Sidney, Tiana, Iyona & Jeremy Team Hinckley 4/23/2013

THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics. ECON 1012: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS Prof. Irene R. Foster

Syllabus: Introduction to Philosophy

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM

PROMOTION MANAGEMENT. Business 1585 TTh - 2:00 p.m. 3:20 p.m., 108 Biddle Hall. Fall Semester 2012

SCORING KEY AND RATING GUIDE

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

T/Th 8:00 AM 9:20 AM office Muir Biology Building 4268 (best contact) Peterson 108 (B)

Course Content Concepts

BIOH : Principles of Medical Physiology

MATH 205: Mathematics for K 8 Teachers: Number and Operations Western Kentucky University Spring 2017

Course Syllabus Advanced-Intermediate Grammar ESOL 0352

Our Hazardous Environment

Office Hours: Mon & Fri 10:00-12:00. Course Description

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

Math 181, Calculus I

Department of Accounting ACC Fundamentals of Financial Accounting Fall, 2015 Syllabus

English Grammar and Usage (ENGL )

San José State University Department of Psychology PSYC , Human Learning, Spring 2017

SPM 5309: SPORT MARKETING Fall 2017 (SEC. 8695; 3 credits)

ENGLISH 298: Intensive Writing

McKendree University School of Education Methods of Teaching Elementary Language Arts EDU 445/545-(W) (3 Credit Hours) Fall 2011

FOREST ECOLOGY FOR 404 FALL SEMESTER 2013

COURSE WEBSITE:

Jeffrey Church and Roger Ware, Industrial Organization: A Strategic Approach, edition 1. It is available for free in PDF format.

Generic syllabus for MCB2000L, 3020L and 3023L Summer 2013

International Environmental Policy Spring :374:315:01 Tuesdays, 10:55 am to 1:55 pm, Blake 131

Transcription:

ZOOLOGY 101/BIOLOGY 101 - FALL 2017 Section 1: MWF 11 AM, 272 Bascom; Section 2: MWF 12:05, 272 Bascom The number of eggs a female tortoise lays can be affected by population density in the nesting area. If the population density is high (many nests), she may lay one clutch of 4-5 eggs every few years; while in lower density areas she can lay several clutches of 15-20 eggs each year. The incubation period of the eggs is determined by the temperature, and ranges from 110 days to 250 days. You can see this aldabra tortoise (Geochelone gigantean) and many other animals at Henry Vilas Zoo, Madison (www.vilaszoo.org) LECTURERS Dr. Sharon Thoma (Course Coordinator) zoology101@zoology.wisc.edu, 336 Birge Office Hours: MW 1:15 2:15 pm, or by appointment Dr. Kurt Amann Office Hours: TBA Dr. John Orrock jorrock@wisc.edu; 356 Birge Office Hours: TBA TEACHING ASSISTANTS Savannah, bartel2@wisc.edu Tyler, hoecker@wisc.edu Jacob, jbkraus2@wisc.edu Office Hours (held in 262 Noland) M 4:30-6:30 pm T 8:45-10:45 am Th 3:30-5:30 pm TEXT/READING Required Text: Biology, Campbell (11th ed.), reserve copies in Steenbock Library. Supplemental materials will be placed on the course learn@uw site. TENTATIVE COURSE OUTLINE AND SCHEDULE Date Topic Reading/Assignments st W 9/6 st F 9/8 st M 9/11 Course Logistics, Introduction to Zoology 2-6; Why I Study Duck Genitalia; The Model Lake, A Learning Secret: Don t Take Notes on a Laptop MOLECULES OF LIFE & CELLULAR ORGANIZATION Diversity of Life Molecules of Cells: Water, Carbohydrates Molecules of Cells: Proteins, Lipids 11-16; 45; 49; Figure 4.9; 66-72 Chapters 2 & 4 (optional chemistry review) 72-83; 153-156; Trans Fats; What is Fat? (video) QUIZ 1 due, 8 AM

Date Topic Reading/Assignments st W 9/13 Lipids, Membrane Structure 126-132; 131-139 st F 9/15 Membrane Transport 132-141 st M 9/18 st W 9/20 st F 9/22 st M 9/25 st W 9/27 Prokaryotic Cells and the Human Microbiome Eukaryotic Organelles Eukaryotic Organelles 97-98; 571-576; Figure 41.17; TED TALKS: How Bacteria Talk QUIZ 2 due, 8 AM 99-118; Figure 6.32; Figure 7.9; Protein Targeting in Eukaryotic Cells 130; 98-122; 86-88; The Origin of Mitochondria and Chloroplasts HOW GENES CONTROL THE ACTIVITIES OF THE ANIMAL CELL DNA Structure and Replication Telomeres, DNA Repair, DNA packaging 84-87; 314; 317-326 QUIZ 3 due, 8 AM st F 9/29 Transcription, Translation 335; 338-350 st M 10/2 Translation, Mutation, Folding END of material for exam 1 327-331; TBA Nature Notes Essay #1 DUE 347-360 QUIZ 4 due, 8 AM THE TRANSMISSION OF GENETIC INFORMATION THROUGH GENERATIONS st W 10/4 Cell Cycle and Mitosis 234-243 TH 10/5 EXAM 1, 7:15 pm st F 10/6 Cancer 244-249; 386-392 st M 10/9 Meiosis 254-266; 306-307 QUIZ 5 due, 8 AM st W 10/11 Mendelian Genetics 269-278; 284-287 st F 10/13 Mendelian Genetics st M 10/16 Epigenetics st W 10/18 278-280; 298-300 Exam Wrapper DUE 330-332; 368-370; DNA is Not Destiny QUIZ 6 due, 8 AM ORGANIZATION OF THE ORGANISM: ENERGY & EXCHANGE Cellular Respiration - Providing Cells With Energy 164-165; 167-181 st F 10/20 Digestion 872-875; 879-880; 896; 900-912 st M 10/23 Digestion, Sleep and Homeostasis st W 10/25 Gas Exchange End of material for Exam 2 907-916; 879-880 QUIZ 7 due, 8 AM 919-920; 937-944 ka F 10/27 Circulation 920--937 ka M 10/30 Excretion ka W 11/1 Osmoregulation 985-996 975-985 QUIZ 8 due, 8 AM

Date Topic Reading/Assignments TH 11/2 EXAM 2, 7:15 pm ka F 11/3 Nervous System 1065-1081 ka M 11/6 Nervous System ka W 11/8 Endocrine System 997-1015 ka F 11/10 Endocrine System 997-1015 ka M 11/13 Reproductive Hormones ka W11/15 Immune System 950-974 ka F 11/17 jo M 11/20 jo W 11/22 F 11/24 Immune System End of material for Exam 3 Natural Selection and Adaptation Natural Selection, Microevolution THANKSGIVING BREAK no class 1083-1104 QUIZ 9 due, 8 AM 1017-1040 QUIZ 10 due, 8 AM 950-974 Chapter 22 (466-483) Chapter 23 (484-503) Chapter 23 (484-503) Chapter 24 (504-522) jo M 11/27 Microevolution and Speciation Chapter 24 (504-522) T 11/28 EXAM 3, 7:15 pm jo W 11/29 Speciation & Macroevolution Chapter 25 (523-549) jo F 12/1 jo M 12/4 jo W 12/6 jo F 12/8 jo M 12/11 jo W 12/13 Introduction to Ecology, Population Ecology Population Ecology Species Interactions and Community Ecology Community Ecology and Ecosystems Ecology Ecosystems Ecology; Biodiversity and Conservation Global Ecological and Environmental Issues Th 12/21 Final Exam 10:05 AM-12:05 PM Chapter 52 (1162-1187) Chapter 53 (1188-1211) QUIZ 11 due, 8 AM Chapter 53 (1188-1211) Chapter 54 (1212-1235) Nature Notes Essay #2 DUE Chapter 54 (1212-1235) Chapter 55 (1236-1257) QUIZ 12 due, 8 AM Chapter 55 (1236-1257) Chapter 56 (1258-1284) Chapter 56 (1258-1284)

DISCUSSION Zoology TAs will be on hand to assist you with lecture materials, answer your questions, and help you prepare for lecture exams. Attendance at discussions is optional, but strongly recommended. You do NOT have to be registered for a discussion section - you may attend any that fit into your schedule. Discussion sections start Wednesday, September 6. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 7:45-8:35 8:50-9:40 Birge 346 9:55-10:45 Van Hise 215 11:00-11:50 Van Vleck B135 12:05-12:55 Birge 346 1:20-2:10 2:25-3:15 Birge 346 3:30-4:20 Birge 346 4:35-5:25 Van Vleck B119 Psychology 103 Psychology 103 Birge 346 Van Vleck B135 Birge 346 No discussions will be held on the following dates: Friday, 10/6 Friday, 11/3 Wednesday, 11/22 (6 pm session) 6:00-6:50 EXAMS and GRADING There will be four exams in this course. The final exam will have a cumulative component. In addition to the exams, there will also be graded pre-lecture quizzes, two short essay assignments, and an exam wrapper. Exam 1 (100 points) = 20% Quizzes (50 points) = 10% Exam 2 (100 points) = 20% Essay Assignments (10 points x 2) = 4% Exam 3 (100 points) = 20% Exam Wrapper (5 points) = 1% Final Exam (125 points) = 25% Grading scale (based on final percentage): 90-100% A 78-79.99% BC Below 60.00% F 88.00-89.99% AB 70-77.99% C 80.00-87.99% B 60-69.99% D EXAMS First midterm exam THURSDAY, October 5, 7:15 pm Second midterm exam - THURSDAY, November 2, 7:15 pm Third midterm exam TUESDAY, November 28, 7:15 pm Final Exam THURSDAY, December 21, 10:05 AM Rooms for exams will be announced during lecture. The format of the exams is objective (multiple-choice, true/false, matching); exams will be computergraded. You should plan to arrive at the exam a little early so you can be seated and start the exam on time. Students arriving late may not be allowed to start the exam.

If you have an academic exam conflict (i.e. a UW class taken for academic credit at the same time as this exam, another exam at the same time as this exam, or travel for varsity athletics) you will be able to take a conflict exam at 5 pm on the day of the regularly-scheduled exam. If you have a conflict, you must fill out the alternate exam request form on the course learn@uw site and turn it in, at lecture, no later than Monday, September 18. Failure to turn in a request on time means you may not be able to take the alternate exam, even if you have an academic conflict. THERE ARE NO MAKEUP MIDTERM EXAMS except in extreme cases such as a death in the family or severe illness. Documentation of extreme cases will be required. If approved by the instructor, a makeup midterm will be a modified format (some combination of essay, short answer, oral exam at the instructor s discretion) and must be completed within one week of the regularly-scheduled exam. If you have an extreme situation, please contact the instructor in advance, if possible. If not possible, you must contact the instructor within 48 hours of the regularly-scheduled exam. Failure to contact the instructor in this time period may result in no credit for the exam. Lack of preparation, not feeling well earlier in the week, forgetting there is an exam scheduled, travel plans for Thanksgiving or winter break, weddings, travel plans for weddings, holiday parties, travel plans for holiday parties, sorority/fraternity/residence hall functions, work, job interviews, internships, internship training, travel to and from leadership (or other) conferences, volunteer activities, intramural sports, academic club activities (including travel or competition), student organization activities, season athletic tickets, televised basketball games, plays, your band having a gig, concerts, your birthday, Frisbee tournaments, birthday parties for your aunt, etc. are NOT extreme cases. The final exam is scheduled for Thursday, December 21, 10:05 am. The university sets the final exam schedule. Students with another final at that exact time will be permitted to take the final on Thursday, December 21 at 7:45 am. There are NO alternate exams for ANY personal reasons (see list in paragraph above). If you have three exams in 24 hours, you will need to change one of your other final exams. The final exam will have a cumulative component; details will be provided during the semester. Exam results will be available to you on the course web site within one week after each exam. Any issues regarding grading or scores on a midterm must be presented to the lecturer, in writing, no later than Friday of the week scores are posted. No exam grades will be dropped. Low grades will not be dropped. There will be no makeup exams during or at the end of the semester to replace midterms that have been missed or to replace midterms on which low scores have been earned. There will be no extra credit assignments available to make up for low exam scores. QUIZZES There will be 12 weekly quizzes; these are due on Mondays by 8 am as listed on the course schedule above. These quizzes will consist of pre-lecture and post-lecture questions. Quizzes are intended to help you keep up with assigned readings, to allow the teaching staff to assess which concepts require extra attention during lectures, and to help you understand which concepts you understand and which you need to invest time in. The quizzes given on exam week will all be post-lecture questions to help with exam prep. - Quizzes must be taken on learn@uw. - Quizzes are open-book. - Quizzes are NOT to be done in collaboration with fellow students. - Quizzes will be posted on learn@uw no later than 8 PM the Friday before the due date.

- Completed quizzes must be submitted no later than 8 AM the day of each lecture. - There is only one attempt allowed for each quiz. - Once a quiz is started, you will have 60-90 minutes to complete the quiz and submit the quiz. The time allotted for a given quiz will be clearly indicated. - Once a quiz is started, you have to finish within the allotted time. If you close the quiz, you cannot re-start. - The lowest two quiz scores will be dropped. - No late quizzes will be accepted for any reason. If you miss a quiz or fail to complete a quiz within the time limit for any reason (including computer and/or connection problems), that will be counted as one of the dropped quiz scores. NATURE NOTES ESSAYS You will write two short essays, each ~ 2 pages in length that will be submitted on learn@uw in a specified drop box. The essays will be based on at least 20 minutes of field observations that you make individually and will incorporate ideas from class and outside reading. Details will be provided in the assignment sheets for each essay, which will be posted on the course web site. You will be required to take photographs to include in your essay. If you do not own a smartphone or a camera, you can check out cameras at various locations on campus - https://ecs.library.wisc.edu/ EXAM WRAPPER You will complete an exam wrapper after your first exam. Details will be provided in lecture before the first exam. MISCELLANEOUS COURSE INFORMATION Course Web Site There is a Learn@UW site associated with this course. All students registered for this class have been enrolled as users on the site for this class. You can access this site from your MyUW page or by going to uwmad.courses.wisconsin.edu. If you have problems accessing the site, please contact DoIT at 264- HELP. PDF files corresponding to lecture will be posted on the web site no later than 10 pm the day before each lecture. These notes are abbreviated versions of lecture material. Instructors pace the lectures on the assumption that you have printed out or reviewed lecture notes. Make sure you check the site regularly for lecture notes, as well as important announcements and materials. We will not provide powerpoint slides. If you miss class for any reason, it is your responsibility to get notes from a classmate and attend discussion to catch up on material. Communication In addition to the web site, your instructors may communicate with you by email. A course list-serve is set up for instructors to contact the hundreds of students enrolled in this course. Students are not to post messages using the course list-serve. Any student who sends messages to the entire course risks losing access to the learn@uw site for the remainder of the semester. Laptop Policy We do not recommend the use of laptops in this course for taking notes. If you do choose to use a laptop in class, any activities not related to class (e-mail, facebook, web-surfing, games, etc.) are not allowed. Computer typing/use is distracting to some students. Any student should feel welcome to make discomfort caused by computer use by others known to the TA or instructor. Students using computers

may be directed to change seating so as not to be disturbing to others. Refusal to comply with such directions or continued use of a computer for non-lecture-related activity may result in ejection from class. Honors Credit Students taking this course for honors will be required to attend an informational meeting during the first two weeks of class. If you fail to meet with Dr. Thoma during the first two weeks of the semester, you will not be able to take the course for honors. Honors requirements and meeting times are emailed to students who enrolled in honors prior to the first day of class. If you are enrolled in honors and did not receive the informational email, please contact Dr. Thoma. Study Skills and Tutoring The Greater University Tutoring Service (GUTS; www.guts.studentorg.wisc.edu) is a volunteer organization that may be able to provide tutoring to students who desire the service. Students With Disabilities We wish to fully include persons with disabilities in this course. Please let Dr. Thoma know if you have a McBurney Visa listing any accommodations in the curriculum, instruction, or assessments in this course, and she will do her best to meet those accommodations. We will attempt to maintain confidentiality of any information you share with us. Any students who require special accommodations for exams are required turn in an exam accommodation request form (see learn@uw) to Dr. Thoma no later than September 18. Academic Honesty Academic dishonesty and plagiarism are issues that are taken very seriously on this campus and within this course. Important documents on plagiarism are available online (http://www.wisc.edu/students/saja/misconduct/uws14.html). Please take the time to examine these resources and familiarize yourself with the information available in order to avoid problems with this issue. If you are unclear on the definition of plagiarism or how to avoid plagiarizing, please contact your TA or your coordinator. If you engage in academic misconduct in this course, you will be penalized with a failing grade for the course. Examples of academic misconduct in Zoology 101 include, but are not limited to, having notes out and visible during an exam, using notes during an exam, copying answers from another student during the exam, stealing an exam, using a stolen exam, misrepresenting an academic conflict (e.g. saying you have an academic conflict for an exam when you don t), not attending an exam and claiming that you did, working on an online quiz with another student, plagiarizing material used in essay assignments. ZOOLOGY 102 Zoology 102 lab is a separate course from Zoology 101. You do not need to be enrolled in Zoology 102 to take Zoology 101. Any questions regarding Zoology 102 should be addressed to the Zoology 102 Coordinator (Gale Oakes; goakes@wisc.edu).