Do not copy without the express written consent of the instructor.

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

BIODIVERSITY: CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES, AND CONSERVATION

Biscayne Bay Campus, Marine Science Building (room 250 D)

Syllabus Fall 2014 Earth Science 130: Introduction to Oceanography

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK PRINCIPLES OF RESEARCH FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES. Professor: Elizabeth K.

HSMP 6611 Strategic Management in Health Care (Strg Mgmt in Health Care) Fall 2012 Thursday 5:30 7:20 PM Ed 2 North, 2301

INTRODUCTION TO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY ANT 2410 FALL 2015

MANA 7A97 - STRESS AND WORK. Fall 2016: 6:00-9:00pm Th. 113 Melcher Hall

SYLLABUS: RURAL SOCIOLOGY 1500 INTRODUCTION TO RURAL SOCIOLOGY SPRING 2017

BUS Computer Concepts and Applications for Business Fall 2012

International Business BADM 455, Section 2 Spring 2008

Corporate Communication

Demography and Population Geography with GISc GEH 320/GEP 620 (H81) / PHE 718 / EES80500 Syllabus

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

HIST 3300 HISTORIOGRAPHY & METHODS Kristine Wirts

COURSE DESCRIPTION PREREQUISITE COURSE PURPOSE

CLASS EXPECTATIONS Respect yourself, the teacher & others 2. Put forth your best effort at all times Be prepared for class each day

Scottsdale Community College Spring 2016 CIS190 Intro to LANs CIS105 or permission of Instructor

Chemistry 106 Chemistry for Health Professions Online Fall 2015

INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY

English Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 MW 10:00 12:00 TT 12:15 1:00 F 9:00 11:00

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

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

MBA6941, Managing Project Teams Course Syllabus. Course Description. Prerequisites. Course Textbook. Course Learning Objectives.

FOREST ECOLOGY FOR 404 FALL SEMESTER 2013

Texas A&M University-Kingsville Department of Language and Literature Summer 2017: English 1302: Rhetoric & Composition I, 3 Credit Hours

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

University of Massachusetts Lowell Graduate School of Education Program Evaluation Spring Online

TROY UNIVERSITY MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEGREE PROGRAM

Course Syllabus p. 1. Introduction to Web Design AVT 217 Spring 2017 TTh 10:30-1:10, 1:30-4:10 Instructor: Shanshan Cui

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

CS 100: Principles of Computing

UNDERGRADUATE SEMINAR

POLITICAL SCIENCE 315 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

ASTRONOMY 2801A: Stars, Galaxies & Cosmology : Fall term

CHMB16H3 TECHNIQUES IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY

MANAGERIAL LEADERSHIP

Lectures: Mondays, Thursdays, 1 pm 2:20 pm David Strong Building, Room C 103

El Camino College Sections #1318 & 1320 Oceanography 10 Fall 2017 Introduction to Oceanography

Class Numbers: & Personal Financial Management. Sections: RVCC & RVDC. Summer 2008 FIN Fully Online

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

ENG 111 Achievement Requirements Fall Semester 2007 MWF 10:30-11: OLSC

Texas A&M University - Central Texas PSYK EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY INSTRUCTOR AND CONTACT INFORMATION

Master Syllabus ENGL 1020 English Composition II

MGMT 479 (Hybrid) Strategic Management

CENTRAL MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE Introduction to Computer Applications BCA ; FALL 2011

BIOH : Principles of Medical Physiology

General Physics I Class Syllabus

FIN 571 International Business Finance

Cleveland State University Introduction to University Life Course Syllabus Fall ASC 101 Section:

COURSE WEBSITE:

Philosophy in Literature: Italo Calvino (Phil. 331) Fall 2014, M and W 12:00-13:50 p.m.; 103 PETR. Professor Alejandro A. Vallega.

Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

COMMUNICATION AND JOURNALISM Introduction to Communication Spring 2010

Indiana University Northwest Chemistry C110 Chemistry of Life

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

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

Accounting 380K.6 Accounting and Control in Nonprofit Organizations (#02705) Spring 2013 Professors Michael H. Granof and Gretchen Charrier

AGN 331 Soil Science. Lecture & Laboratory. Face to Face Version, Spring, Syllabus

Course Syllabus Solid Waste Management and Environmental Health ENVH 445 Fall Quarter 2016 (3 Credits)

Social Media Marketing BUS COURSE OUTLINE

AGN 331 Soil Science Lecture & Laboratory Face to Face Version, Spring, 2012 Syllabus

IST 440, Section 004: Technology Integration and Problem-Solving Spring 2017 Mon, Wed, & Fri 12:20-1:10pm Room IST 202

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

UNEP-WCMC report on activities to ICRI

INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY (PSYC 1101) ONLINE SYLLABUS. Instructor: April Babb Crisp, M.S., LPC

MGMT 3362 Human Resource Management Course Syllabus Spring 2016 (Interactive Video) Business Administration 222D (Edinburg Campus)

BUS 4040, Communication Skills for Leaders Course Syllabus. Course Description. Course Textbook. Course Learning Outcomes. Credits. Academic Integrity

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

Computer Architecture CSC

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

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

Course Guide and Syllabus for Zero Textbook Cost FRN 210

Introduction to Forensic Drug Chemistry

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA

Office Location: LOCATION: BS 217 COURSE REFERENCE NUMBER: 93000

BA 130 Introduction to International Business

DIGITAL GAMING AND SIMULATION Course Syllabus Advanced Game Programming GAME 2374

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205

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

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

Economics 201 Principles of Microeconomics Fall 2010 MWF 10:00 10:50am 160 Bryan Building

Texas A&M University-Central Texas CISK Comprehensive Networking C_SK Computer Networks Monday/Wednesday 5.

Spring 2015 CRN: Department: English CONTACT INFORMATION: REQUIRED TEXT:

COURSE SYLLABUS: CPSC6142 SYSTEM SIMULATION-SPRING 2015

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

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

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

SPCH 1315: Public Speaking Course Syllabus: SPRING 2014

University of Pittsburgh Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Russian 0015: Russian for Heritage Learners 2 MoWe 3:00PM - 4:15PM G13 CL

Coding II: Server side web development, databases and analytics ACAD 276 (4 Units)

Instructor Experience and Qualifications Professor of Business at NDNU; Over twenty-five years of experience in teaching undergraduate students.

Name: Giovanni Liberatore NYUHome Address: Office Hours: by appointment Villa Ulivi Office Extension: 312

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

Albright College Reading, PA Tentative Syllabus

ENGLISH 298: Intensive Writing

Strategic Management (MBA 800-AE) Fall 2010

Social Media Journalism J336F Unique ID CMA Fall 2012

Indigenous Thought in Latin American Philosophy (Phil 607) Graduate Seminar Fall 2016, Prof. Alejandro A. Vallega SC 250C, M-W 16:00-17:50

Military Science 101, Sections 001, 002, 003, 004 Fall 2014

Transcription:

without the express written consent of the instructor. MARINE RESERVES PCB 4467-C ADVANCED MARINE RESERVES PCB 5418-C A Global Learning Course Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. (Claudia) Ligia Collado-Vides Office: MMC- Office Hours: ONLY by appointment, email at colladol@fiu.edu T.A. Lowell Iporac Email: liporac@fiu.edu Office: Office Hours: Schedule Semester: August 21 st December 10 th, 2017 Lecture: Monday and Wednesday 9:00 to 10:15 AM DM 190 Lab: Monday 11:00 pm 1:30 PM DM 164 Wednesday 11:00 pm 1:30 PM DM 193

without the express written consent of the instructor. Introduction Coastal zones and particularly the Caribbean region are well known for their beautiful beaches and complex ecosystems. Extremely rapid tourist development, accompanied by high population growth, has modified the structure of the human and biological communities, causing significant adverse environmental impacts to our marine resources. Coastal problems are also affected by local, regional and global stressors that need to be incorporated in any analysis. Therefore, management of these resources has become a need and a challenge. The goal of establishing Marine Protected Areas (MPA) is to protect the fisheries, ecosystems, and the biodiversity of highly affected or threatened areas or species, as well as to benefit the dependent human communities and their cultural values. Knowledge of social concepts such as co-management, respect of native cultures and property rights; and biological concepts, such as connectivity, food web size and networks, demography of threatened species, and monitoring are essential for the design and management of a successful MPA. These activities are complex, and only welltrained people with global awareness and perspective will be able to handle the different challenges of the design, establishment and management of an MPA. Course description The course employs active learning strategies to increase students global awareness, global perspective, and attitude of global engagement. Global perspectives will be achieved through lectures and different learning strategies that will provide information on biological and sociological concepts as well as methods for the design and management of marine protected areas around the globe. Objectives Provide students with a global knowledge of biological and social methods and problems related with the management of Marine Protected Areas. Provide students with a global perspective by analyzing multiple marines protected areas around the globe. Special emphasis will be on South Florida and Caribbean within a global context. Global Learning Course Outcomes 1. Through the study of Marine Protected Areas, students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of the interrelatedness of social concepts such as co-management, respect of native cultures and property rights; and biological concepts, such as diversity, fisheries, connectivity, food webs and coral reef networks at local, and global scales. 2. Students will be able to develop a deep analysis of a Marine Protected Area. Each study will provide a description of their MPA, and an evaluation of the 2

without the express written consent of the instructor. status of the selected MPA, students will analyze how active the management of the selected MPA is; they will detect gaps and strengths of that their particular Marine Protected Area and if it worth the label of an MPA. 3. Students will be able to participate in a town hall meeting to solve real problems faced by Marine reserves. Students will be able to demonstrate their willingness to engage in local problem solving and interact with different cultural sectors. This course has a lecture and laboratory sections which are very close related. The laboratory is mandatory in this class. Lecture section will count for 60% of your grade, the laboratory section will count for 40% of your grade. Lecture section Through lectures, guest speakers, readings and discussions in class students will get acquainted with MPAs from different countries and cultures. Through the analysis of particular cases students will learn about the importance of stakeholders perspectives about marine resources and the consequences on management strategies set in different MPAs. Logistics: PLEASE RED THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT Class dynamics: Preparatory assignments, clicker questions, lectures, in class exercises and exams will be the activities that will characterize this class. All of them will have a value in your final grade. Detailed description of each activity: Preparatory assignment: 5% of your final grade Each class you will be assigned a preparatory assignment to be returned via Turnitin on Mondays before the class starts. You will have to write a short essay responding specific questions that will guide you to the topic that will be addressed that week. Your assignment will have a 1 or 0 values depending if you follow the instruction and do not copy paste materials. If your plagiarism level is above 15 % you will get a 0. Remember this is a learning activity that will increase your performance in class and exams. To avoid excessive matching please do not quote sources generate and demonstrate your understanding by explaining in your own words and do not paste the original questions from the assignment into the document you submit. If pasting in the original questions helps you to organize your work, that is fine, but be sure to delete them before you turn it in. All Turnitin assignments will be set up to allow you to check your own originality report, so please do this before the assignment is due to make sure that no inadvertent plagiarism has slipped into 3

without the express written consent of the instructor. your work. If you are using software designed to overcome Turnitin s ability to detect plagiarism, and our internal system detects it, you will be directed to the University authorities for cheating. PLEASE use this opportunity for learning. It is your time, your career, your future. Instructions for your preparatory assignment essay: (Read carefully, following instructions properly will result in a 1, as long as you have a good content. But if you have a good content but NOT FOLLOWING directions properly, you will get a 0). Your essay MUST be one full page with normal margins (1x1x1x1) 1) No name, no title 2) Minimum 500 words, do not exceed 1.5 pages. 2 Single space 3) Font type Arial 12 4) One single return between questions. No more than that. Each question should be addressed without spaces. PLEASE BE SURE TO USE THE OPTION REMOVE SPACE AFTER PARAGRAPH TO AVOID GETTING AN EXTRA SPACE AFTER ENTERING A RETURN- THIS OPTION IS LOCALIZED IN YOUR WORD SETTINGS FOR LINE AND PARAGRAPH SPACING TAB) Questions will be provided by instructor one week ahead of the class. Can be based on a paper you will have to read, or a video, or just a series of questions that you will need to find information to answer them. Clicker questions: 5 % of your final grade The first thing we will do each class is a series of clicker questions that will be based on your preparatory assignment. Questions based on your preparatory assignment will be graded. Two questions per class will be graded. The rest of the class clicker questions will count as one extra point per class if you participate in at least 75% of all questions (not graded). A maximum of 3 points per class will be awarded if you get two correct answers and participate in more than 75% of clicker questions. Group participation in class: 5% of your final grade (3% mid-semester concept maps -3 total, 1 per section-, 2% final concept map). At the end of each section we will devote a class to build up a concept map that integrates all the parts learned for that particular section. This will be a guided activity during the class that has to be conducted in groups. The course is designed to cover three major sections (See detailed schedule). You will get a grade for each concept map, and the group that will win the best concept map will earn 3 extra credit points for that section. A final concept map will be conducted in the very last class; the winning group will earn 5 extra credit points for their final exam. 4

without the express written consent of the instructor. Exams: 45% of your final grade (Two mid-term exams 10% each, Final Exam 25%). Exams will be a mix of multiple choice, true and false, and short answers. Textbook Required textbook: Marine Protected Areas: tools for sustaining ocean ecosystems. National Academy Press. Washington D.C. 2001. 272 p. ISBN: 0-309-07286-7. Provided by instructor. Complementary books: Salm, R. V., J. R. Clark and E. Siirila. 2000. Marine and coastal protected areas. A gude for planners and managers. Third Edition. IUCN. Washington D.C. xxi: 371 p. Castro, P. and M. Huber. (7 th -9 th editions). Marine Biology. McGraw-Hill Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0073524207. Speight, M. and P. Henderson. 2010. Marine Ecology. Concepts and applications. Wiley-Blackwell. 276 p. ISBN 978-1-4051-2699-1 (hardcover) or ISBN 978-1-4443-3545-3 (pbk). Laboratory section The laboratory section is a hands-on application of concepts that are learned from the lecture. Expect to run interviews, go to field, zonation/monitoring simulation implementing process, and at the end, conduct an independent project researching a marine protected area of your choice. Interview Assignment (August 21/23 September 11/13): 4 weeks (In-class and Outside-of-class) Students will establish objectives for collecting survey data, create a questionnaire that will be distributed to members of a community (at FIU or a surrounding community), and will collect data based on the questionnaires. The questionnaire will ask questions pertaining to general knowledge of marine protected areas, and knowledge and pre-conceptions of the Biscayne Bay National Park. Students will collect and analyze survey data, which will then be presented to the class. Deadline for interview exercise: September 10-12 for Monday and Wednesday class respectively. Townhall meetings (September 18/20-25/27 and October 30/Nov 1 November 6/8): (in-class) There will be two separate simulated townhall meeting assignments that will allow students to act out a stakeholder group s position on a case-study related to marine protected areas. The week before the townhall meeting will be devoted to researching the student group s assigned role and 5

without the express written consent of the instructor. position pertaining to that issue. Grading will be based on a small abstract of their role, as well as actual acting of the role, based on how knowledgeable each role s perspective was). Date of townhall meetings: September 25/27 and November 6/8) Zonation Exercise (October 2/4): (In-class) Students will be given a map of a marine region in which they must draw out zonations within the marine region that corresponds to the allowed usage of marine resources and ecosystems. Criteria for zonation will be based on the IUCN categories of classified protected areas. Students will be familiarized with the IUCN categories to be used in the implementation of an MPA, the challenges with assigning zones within a marine region, and the proposal of their zonation plan through a group presentation: Date of zonation exercise: October 2/4, with prior IUCN familiarity as homework Monitoring Exercise (October 16/18 23/25): (in-class) Complementary to the zonation exercise, students will be implementing a monitoring plan that will outline the monitoring of marine resources within the marine protected area of their selected MPA for the semester project. Students may find it helpful to look at other resources, such as other MPA management plans that are relevant to their final project. Students will have time to develop a solid monitoring plan for their MPA, which will then be presented in the following class period. (Deadline of monitoring plan: October 23/25) Detailed description of the lab projects: Marine Protected Area Evaluation and Improvement You are to select one Marine Protected Area of your choice, write an essay and create a power-point presentation on the MPA. The objective of the presentation is to introduce the audience to the MPA of your choice (already established), to provide us with all the necessary background information (names, location, size, objective of the reserve, legal status, category) and to provide an analysis of the status of the MPA (i.e., is there a management plan in place? Is there a monitoring program in place? Is there evidence that the MPA is working? What are the main challenges to its management?, etc.). Remember you need to have a global, regional and local perspective. Also, MPAs in Florida cannot be used for this final project (we want you to look at other, out-of-state or international perspectives on MPAs as part of the global learning initiative). You will need to analyze what is working and what is not working in your selected MPA and need to propose strategies that can improve its management. You will both return and essay and will prepare a PPT presentation for the class. Your project has to be submitted using the Turnitin tool in your Blackboard web site. Deadline to submit your essay is November 29 th, 2017 by 5:00 PM. Be sure to submit it before that time. Avoid problems with the system. NO EXCUSES WILL BE ACCEPTED. If you procrastinate and wait until last minute to submit and the system crashes you will not be able to submit it again. 6

without the express written consent of the instructor. ALL STUDENTS GRAD AND UNDERGRAD WILL PRESENT THEIR WH PROJECT AS A PPT during lab session. Lab section Essay (Final semester group research project) Due DATE : Wednesday, November 29 th, 2017 by 5:00 PM Paper Guidelines: Minimum 8 pages for undergraduate, and 15 pages for graduate of double-spaced text. In addition, figures, maps & tables as needed Must include a minimum reference list of 10 citations, all 10 must be scientific papers. You may use websites but they do not count for the MINIMUM of 10 peer review papers. Please number pages & use 12-point font, Times New Roman Your paper must be submitted to turnitin.com for an authenticity check before it will be graded. If any of the paper is plagiarized, you will get a 0 for the assignment and you will fail the class. REMEMBER: You must cite and paraphrase all work appropriately, otherwise its plagiarism (= the wrongful appropriation and publication as one s own, of the ideas or the expression of the ideas of another). o You will submit your paper via Blackboard using the Turnitin tool. o Your paper must be posted by the due date, Wednesday November 29 th by 5 PM. Within 30 minutes of submission you will be able to see the same originality report that the instructors will see. You are encouraged to submit your paper early and ensure you are not paraphrasing, use your own ideas. Analyze your essay before you submit your final version. You must ask the instructor to delete earlier versions before you submit your final version. Use Turnitin as a tool that will help you improve your manuscript. The course will be evaluated based on lecture and lab activities. Grade scale: A: 90-100%, B: 80-89%, C: 70-79 D: 60-69%, F:<60%. Undergraduate Grading 100 % Lecture (60 %) Preparatory assignment:5% Clicker participation: 5% Concept map (in-class activities): 5% Exams: 45% Lab (40 %) Reading summaries and quizzes: 5% Group activities in-class: 10 % (Town hall meetings, monitoring, zonation) Group activities outside of classroom: 10% (Interview exercise, field trips) Group MPA study case presentation and written report: 15% 7

without the express written consent of the instructor. Graduate Grading 100 % Lecture (60 %) Preparatory assignment:5% Clicker participation: 5% Concept map (in-class activities): 5% Exams: 40% Laboratory (40 %) Modifications for Graduate Grading: Graduate students are expected to return an essay and prepare a presentation on a particular Marine Protected Area (described below) Reading summaries and quizzes: 5% Group activities in-class: 10 % (Town hall meetings, monitoring, zonation) Group activities outside of classroom: 5% (Interview exercise, field trips) of final grade MPA study case presentation and written report: 20 % of final grade There will be absolutely no make-up exams or any other extra credits! Exams will not be curved. Successful completion of General Biology I and II is a prerequisite. Course expectations: Regular class attendance is mandatory as is appearance on time. PLEASE BE RESPECTFUL WITH YOURSELF, PROFESSOR AND PEERS: No cell phones or beepers, chatting, surfing internet are tolerated during class. Instructors Communication: All instructor communication and announcements will be done by email and through the blackboard section of the course web site. Only students FIU email address will be used. If students do not use their FIU email account, use the easy-to-set-up automatic mail forwarding option to the email account you are using regularly. Students are required to maintain a functional FIU email account and to observe the News web page. Emails that are returned due to over quota email accounts will not be re-sent. All email from students must contain PCB 4467C, or PCB 5418C or MPA course, or Marine Reserves course in the subject line; student emails without proper subject line and without the student s name will not be answered! Sexual harassment policy: FIU is committed to eliminating sexual harassment. In accordance with the FIU Faculty Senate guidelines, this syllabus includes a warning that any misconduct will be reported. 8

without the express written consent of the instructor. Academic misconduct: FIU is committed to not tolerating any academic misconduct by students. In accordance with the FIU Faculty Senate guidelines, this syllabus includes a warning that any academic misconduct, particularly cheating in exams, will be reported and penalized. ALWAYS STAY INFORMED! FOR MORE INFORMATION AND UPDATES CHECK OUT THE COURSE BLACKBOARD SITE 9