Ecology for Teachers
BIOL 5311
Course
Syllabus
Instructor
Dr. Mark McGinley
Associate
Professor
Honors College and
Department of Biological Sciences
Room 215
McClelland Hall
mark.mcginley@ttu.edu
The best way for
you to contact me during this course is via email (I spend much of my life
attached to my computer and I am usually pretty good at getting back to people
via email).
Course Outline
The purpose of
this course is to provide a content knowledge in the fields of ecology and
evolution to practicing teachers. The ecology portion of this course will
examine ecology of individuals, populations, and communities and introduce you
to the techniques that ecologists use to develop hypotheses (including
mathematical modeling) and test their hypotheses in the lab and the field. The
evolution portion of the course will discuss the apparent controversy between
science and religion and discuss topics of micro and macro evolution.
Required
Readings.
There is no
textbook required for this class. The readings for the ecology portion of this
course will come from this class will come from the Ecology for Teachers Reader
published in the Encyclopedia of the Earth.
Course Blog
I have created a
blog for this course (my initial effort at blogging). The Ecology for Teachers
blog can be found at http://ecologyforteachers2013.blogspot.com/.
This blog will offer a means of communication among all members of this course.
I will post regularly (at least weekly) on this site and I encourage you to use
this as a forum for interaction. I am not going to grade your participation in
the blog, but obviously the more that you share your thoughts on the blog, the
better indication I will have about how the class is going.
Expected Learning Outcomes
Explicit expected
learning outcomes for each lesson are located in the Ecology for Teachers
Reader.
Methods for
Assessing the Expected Learning Outcomes
The expected
learning outcomes will be assessed using a midterm exam, a final exam, and a
project. Students in this class will be involved in the Student Science
Communication Project with the EoE. You will be required to write an article
suitable for publication by the EoE. All articles that meet my approval will be
submitted for review by the EoE and articles that are accepted by the Topic
Editor will be published. More details of this assignment will be coming.
Grading
Midterm Exam (Due
February 28th) 20%
Cumulative Final
Exam (due May 2nd) 20%
Articles for EoE 60%
Because it is not
always possible for me to make the grades fall on a 90, 80, 70, etc. scale, I
will let you know the grade that your score would have earned after each
assignment. This course is not graded on a curve, so it is possible for all, or
no, students to earn a particular grade.
I'm trying to catch up on some reading on the encyclopedia but I am having a hard time accessing it - it's saying database connection error. Anybody else having the same trouble? Thanks!
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