This course is the introduction of the Evolutionary Studies (EvoS) minor. This course is team-taught to provide you an interdisciplinary introduction to evolutionary theory and applications. Several of our meetings will also involve guest experts from other institutions as part of the Alabama Lectures on Life's Evolution (ALLELE) series and video lectures culled from the EvoS Consortium archives. The disciplines represented this semester include biology, anthropology, psychology, geology, philosophy, and history. These meetings will all include readings assigned by the lecturer or readings of the guest speaker that will be assigned. This course is designed to open your mind to what evolution is and how it applies to all life. Topics will be diverse and may include speciation, animal behavior, dinosaur paleontology, evolution of religion, evolutionary medicine, human emotions, deception, human fossils, and the evolutionary biology of physical attractiveness. This diversity of topics should make for an academic experience that is nothing short of fascinating.
By the end of this term, you should be able to:
· Describe the basic principles of evolutionary theory
· Summarize the nature of the forces of evolution
· Use evolutionary theory to explain species variation
· Outline how evolutionary theory applies across academic disciplines
· Critically evaluate different scholarly approaches to evolution
· Explain the interface between evolutionary scholarship and human societies
· Critique topics that have been explained using evolutionary theory or use evolutionary theory as a critical device
· Generate testable hypotheses about topics related to evolution
· Effectively research and write a paper related to evolution
This course will meet in ten Hoor 22, NOT ten Hoor 30 as originally scheduled.
Attendance will be monitored through in-class quizzes and exams. If you fail to come to class, you will received a 0 for that quiz. You will not be penalized further for the absence, but if you attend ALL meetings of the course, you will receive 5 bonus course points. You are not excepted from this policy if your absence is excused--to earn the bonus points, no absences period.
eLearning
This course will use eLearning to distribute additional readings. Access eLearning via myBama. There is a box called eLearning on the Academics tab that should list your courses that are currently let up with eLearning. Log in and set your eLearning email up to direct your email to your Bama account (and be sure to set up your Bama account to forward to your regular personal account if you don’t plan on using it as your primary account). To do this, go to the My Setting option in the upper right-hand corner. On the My Profile tab, make sure your email address is correct (select Edit Profile if not and correct it). Then select the My Tool Options tab. Scroll down to Mail and check the box “Forward all mail message to the e-mail address in my profile.” Click Save at the bottom of the page, and you are good to go (be sure to do this, as it doesn’t do it automatically). This is important, as you likely won’t remember to check eLearning regularly for messages from me, but I will not accept that as an excuse for missing information (however, given that eLearning is not 100% reliable, I will often send important message via your Bama email—which, again, is why you need to make sure that account is your primary email or set up to forward to your primary email).
Quizzes (25 points): There will be a quiz at each class meeting, except on exam dates. The quizzes will cover the assigned reading for the date. There will be 36 quizzes. Each quiz will be 1-2 multiple choice, true/false, or short answer questions. Quiz scores will be calculated as % correct out of 100%. This percent will then be divided by 4 to determine your course points out of 20.
Research Proposal (15 points): A 3-page research proposal will be due April 19. The purpose of this proposal is to help you start thinking about evolutionary problems in terms of testable hypotheses. Your proposal should outline a study you could do here at UA as an undergraduate and one that, in fact, you might conduct in a future semester. Your proposal should (1) outline the background of your topic and how you came to formulate your hypothesis, (2) state your pursuit in terms of a falsifiable hypothesis, (3) the methods you would use to conduct your study (including the population or subject of interest, the materials you would use for the study, and how you would analyze your data), and (4) what you expect to find and the implications of these findings with regard to the existing literature on the topic. You will be expected to cite that literature appropriately. If you do not know how to cite literature scientifically, I will post relevant links on eLearning to assist you. Your proposal should take the following form and contain section headers to indicate you have used this form:
background (summarizes what you're going to say)
hypothesis
Methods (10 points)
subjects/population
materials
procedure
analysis
Discussion (10 points)
implications
significance
Conclusion (2 points)
summarize what you've said
Exams (60 points): There two exams, worth 30 points each. Exams are NOT cumulative. Exams are based on readings, lectures, and discussion material. You are responsible for all the material of the course, so it is imperative that you come to every session of class, take notes, participate, and seek clarification for material you do not understand.
25 points = QUIZZES
15 points = RESEARCH PROPOSAL
30 points = MIDTERM EXAM
30 points = FINAL EXAM
100 points
Dates |
Instructor |
Activity |
Readings |
Thurs, Jan 12 |
Lynn |
Introduction, EvoS program, ALLELE series, research proposal |
Quammen pp. 11-48 |
Tues, Jan 17 |
Lynn |
Scientific method |
Quammen pp. 49-85 |
Thurs, Jan 19 |
Raphael |
History of Evolutionary Theory |
Quammen pp. 86-122 |
Tues, Jan 24 |
Lynn |
Forces of Evolution |
Quammen pp. 123-159 |
Thurs, Jan 26 |
Lynn |
ALLELE guest: Eugenie Scott |
Scott & Matzke 2007; Mead & Mates 2009 |
Tues, Jan 31 |
Raphael |
History of Evolutionary Theory |
Quammen pp. 160-196 |
Thurs, Feb 2 |
Raphael |
Quammen pp. 197-233 |
|
Tues Feb 7 |
Andrus |
Paleontology |
Quammen pp. 234-253 |
Thurs, Feb 9 |
Andrus |
Wilson pp. 1-37 |
|
Tues, Feb 14 |
Andrus |
Wilson pp. 38-75 |
|
Thurs, Feb 16 |
Andrus |
ALLELE guest: Brian Fagan |
Chapters from “The Ice Age” |
Tues, Feb 21 |
Sheridan |
Evolutionary Biology |
“Animal Self”; Sih 2004 |
Thurs, Feb 23 |
Lynn |
Andy Sih visit |
Wilson pp. 76-112 |
Tues, Feb 28 |
Sheridan |
Ecology |
Wilson pp. 113-149 |
Thurs, Mar 1 |
Earley |
Animal Behavior |
Wilson pp. 150-186 |
Tues, Mar 6 |
Earley |
Wilson pp. 187-223 |
|
Thurs, Mar 8 |
Lynn |
Midterm Exam |
|
Mar 13 & 15 |
SPRING BREAK |
||
Tues, Mar 20 |
Earley |
Animal Behavior |
Wilson pp. 224-260 |
Thurs, Mar 22 |
Lynn |
Evolutionary Medicine |
Wilson pp. 261-297 |
Tues, Mar 27 |
Wolfgram |
Language |
Wilson pp. 298-334 |
Thurs, Mar 29 |
Wolfgram |
ALLELE guest: Ryosuke Motani |
Motani 1999; Motani 2010 |
Tues, Apr 3 |
Wolfgram |
Language |
Lane pp. 118-131 |
Thurs, Apr 5 |
Boles |
Evolutionary Psychology |
Lane pp. 131-143 |
Tues, Apr 10 |
Boles |
Lane pp. 232-245 |
|
Thurs, Apr 12 |
Lynn |
ALLELE guest: Frans de Waal |
De Waal & Ferrari 2010 |
Tues, Apr 17 |
Guadagno |
Lane pp. 245-259 |
|
Thurs, Apr 19 |
Richards |
Evolution & Philosophy |
Lane pp. 260-269 |
Tues, Apr 24 |
Richards |
Lane pp. 269-285 |
|
Thurs, Apr 26 |
Richards |
?? |
|
Wed, May 2 8-10:30 AM |
FINAL EXAM |
Attendance: If you miss a class, it is your responsibility to utilize Tegrity to view lectures or contact a classmate to get notes. However, I cannot guarantee that every lecture will be posted to Tegrity. Furthermore, discussions will be an important aspect of this course, which is difficult to re-experience via Tegrity.
Exams: If you miss an exam for any reason whatsoever, whether excused or unexcused, you will be able to make it up by completing a 15-page research paper. The topic will be chosen by Dr. Lynn and format instructions will be provided. If you miss the midterm, the research paper will be due on the day of the final exam. If you miss the final exam, you will be given two weeks to complete and turn in the research paper make-up.
Research Proposal: Late submissions will only be accepted by prior arrangement and/or with a very good reason. Otherwise, I will begin deducting 1 point from the research proposal score for each day or portion thereof. If it is received more than 15 days late, you will receive a 0 for the assignment. Many assignments being due at the same time is never a good reason, and extensions will never be authorized on that basis, so please don’t ask. No extensions will be authorized during the 3 days immediately prior to the due date except in the case of a legitimate medical emergency.
There are at least 3 ways to earn extra credit. You may do any or all of these things, earning a possible 15 total extra credit points:
All students in attendance at the University of Alabama are expected to be honorable and to observe standards of conduct appropriate to a community of scholars. The University expects from its students a higher standard of conduct than the minimum required to avoid discipline. Academic misconduct includes all acts of dishonesty in any academically related matter and any knowing or intentional help or attempt to help, or conspiracy to help, another student.
The Academic Misconduct Disciplinary Policy will be followed in the event of academic misconduct.
This course is the introduction to a minor in Evolutionary Studies (EvoS). It is open to all students but is a requirement for the minor. If you have not already decided to declare a minor in EvoS, we hope this course leads you to consider doing so. EvoS is an interdisciplinary minor, designed to introduce students to the fundamental importance of evolutionary theory as an explanatory model for life and behavior. Requirements of the minor include two capstone courses (including this introduction), a 200-level course in the biological principles of evolution, and another foundational course in one of three disciplines. Additionally, minors are required to complete six elective hours in two separate disciplines.
This program is integrated with UA's Evolution and Origins Working Group (EVOWOG)and its Alabama Lectures on Life's Evolution (ALLELE) speaker series ("Like" us on Facebook [www.facebook.com/ALLELEseries] to stay informed!). The speakers you will meet this semester are here as part of that series. In addition to meeting with this class, they will each present a public lecture and a lecture for a sponsoring department. You are strongly encouraged to attend these lectures. This minor is part of a larger EvoS Consortium, which includes approximately 42 other institutions worldwide, though we are only one of four full-fledged minors. We take pride in this fact, given that Alabama recently scored at the very bottom of the 50 states in teaching evolution at the k-12 levels (even worse than Mississippi!).
As part of the EvoS program, we are starting an EvoS club, that we hope will grow out of this class. You are welcome to become part of this club whether you declare yourself an EvoS minor or simply maintain an abiding interest in evolutionary theory and its myriad applications and implications. We hope the activities of the club will include regular evolution-oriented field trips and organizing activities around ALLELE speakers. The first trip that is being planned is one to visit the new human evolution exhibit at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C.
If you are interested in the EvoS minor (either to declare or for more information), contact Dr. Lynn (cdlynn@ua.edu) or Dr. Rissler (rissler@as.ua.edu).
There is a closed Facebook group for the course at http://www.facebook.com/groups/ant150/. This group is used to share relevant information from media sources and facilitate discussion. Please request to join the group.
"Like" the UA Department of Anthropology (www.facebook.com/UAAnthroDept) and the ALLELE series (www.facebook.com/ALLELEseries) on Facebook so that we can keep in touch with you and you can stay informed about our events and activities.
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