BIOL210

Genetics

Fall 2015

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Prof. Jones

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Course Policies

Below you will find various course policies, including:

Attendance

It's important that you be in class. As you will discover, there will be no lecture notes for me to give you should you miss a meeting, no little PowerPoint handouts. Classes will be devoted to reviewing the topic(s) for the day, informed by your preparatory reading. Needless to say, that reading is critical to your ability to participate in class, clarify any difficulties you're having, and succeed in learning as much as you can about genetics.

Grading

I do not grade on a curve, so I hope that each of you will do your best to help your fellow students: if they benefit, it does you no harm. In fact, one of the best ways to learn something is to explain it to someone else, so talk to your classmates (see "Studying Genetics" below). Grades for this course will be determined as follows:

I'm going to be using the point system for this course, so you don't have to worry about calculating percentages for individual components. I'll try to keep an up-to-date total here on the website, so you can always determine your grade so far by comparing what you've earned with the max possible. (And don't you just hate Max, that little weenie?) Given my grading scale (see below), you can therefore calculate your own grade in the course at any time.

Here is the grading scale I use in all my classes:

numeric gradeletter grade
93.3 - 100A
90.0 - 93.2A-
86.7 - 89.9B+
83.3 - 86.6B
80.0 - 83.2B-
76.7 - 79.9C+
73.3 - 76.6C
70.0 - 73.2C-
66.7 - 69.9D+
63.3 - 66.6D
60.0 - 63.2D-

Just to review, this is what the Student Handbook has to say about grades:

A and A-
These grades are given for achievement of the highest caliber. They reflect independent work, original thinking, and the ability to acquire and effectively use knowledge.
B+, B, and B-
These grades are given for higher than average achievement. Evidence of independent work and original thinking is expected.
C+, C, and C-
These grades are given when the student has devoted a reasonable amount of time, effort, and attention to the work of the course and has satisfied the following criteria: familiarity with the content of the course, familiarity with the methods of study of the course, and active participation in the work of the class.
D+, D, and D-
These grades are given for unsatisfactory work, below the standard expected by the College. They indicate work which in one or more important aspects falls below the average expected of students for graduation. The work is, however, sufficient to be credited for graduation, if balanced by superior work in other courses.

Note that there isn't a whole lot of emphasis on knowledge here (as traditionally defined). Which is odd, but in any event, these descriptions are guidelines, not absolute criteria for a given grade. If you work independently, think originally, and are able to acquire and effectively use knowledge, but don't know squat about genetics at the end of the course, that's simply not "A" work. Context is important, people.

Reading (and Viewing)

In this course, being prepared for each class meeting is critically important. Classtime will be spent discussing the material for that day; I will not be lecturing. If you don't keep up with the reading — and by that I mean active reading, not just using a highlighter — and the videos, you won't be able to keep up in class, you won't fully understand what's being taught, the class will rapidly become a waste of time for you.

Late Assignments

Assignments turned in late will not be accepted. Period.

Extra Credit

On a 100-point exam, I will give you 110 points-worth of questions. Thus, you can miss (nearly) 10% of the questions on any hour exam and still get the full 100 points. With the exception of these additional points on exams, I do not anticipate any opportunity for extra credit in this course. Spend your energy learning the course material.

Food

No eating in class, unless you can convince me it's medically necessary. I don't eat in class!

Cell Phones and Their Ilk

I don't like cell phones. I understand how useful they can be for some people, but far too often paying attention to your phone becomes an end in itself. When you're in class, it's important that you are in class, paying attention to what we're talking about. There will be times I ask you to use your phone for an in-class exercise, but other than that I don't want to see your phone out. It's probably a distraction for you (why else have it out?), and quite possibly for others around you — and that's just inconsiderate. If you can't live for an hour without checking your phone, you really should make an appointment with the counseling center, because you've got a serious problem.

Lab Conduct

There is to be NO food or drink in the lab at ANY time. Rules have gotten stricter, fines have gotten much higher, and the government is coming after undergraduate institutions like never before. If I see any comestibles or potables in lab you will be docked points in accordance with my mood; if I see you put anything into your mouth, I may well dock you several hundred (yes, hundred) points. This is a serious infraction of laboratory protocols.

The only thing worse is endangering other students or their data, whether through carelessness or malice. If I find anyone doing something which might result in harm to another student or compromise their experimental results, I will fail the perpetrator for the course. I am by and large a fairly easy-going guy, but there are some things which are simply beyond the pale; this is one of them.

Group Lab Reports

For certain labs I will require group (rather than individual) lab reports. When submitting group reports, please be sure to:

If you have any questions about this format, please don't hesitate to ask me.

Studying Genetics

Science is a collaborative venture. I urge you to get together with your fellow students as much as possible to study the material for this course in groups. Discussing problems, studying for exams with other students, and asking each other questions on the reading assignments are all examples of activities which will benefit you and which I encourage. Obviously you cannot consult with others during exams or quizzes, but the homework may be something of a grey area for many of you. For my courses, you must prepare your own answers to assigned problems, but I feel that getting together with other students in the course to discuss and think through problems together is not only perfectly acceptable, it is a very good idea. If you have arrived at what you believe to be the correct answer, put it aside for fifteen minutes before writing it down; this way you can be more confident that you really know what it is you're saying, and your answers won't be identical to your partners'.

Note that the idea of collaborative learning in this way does not mean that you should ask for answers from others who have already taken this or a similar course, nor should you just accept an answer from a classmate whom you think is likely to be right. Everybody is mistaken sometimes, and if you don't understand why his or her answer is the right one, well, then you don't understand it. And that is not where you want to be. Conversely, if you're sure you've got the right answer, don't just tell your study group and be done with it. Try to help them arrive at the same conclusion you did step by step; someone else may come up with a very different view of the problem which forces you to rethink your approach. And rethinking your approach, even if it doesn't turn out to change your mind about your answer, is critical to your success as a scientist.

My concern is not that you "learn" genetics, seeing it as a (very large) pile of facts, but that you understand it. Your fellow students and I are resources to help you; it's up to you to do the work necessary to gain that understanding.

You should expect to spend at least 2 hours studying on your own for every hour in the classroom. At a minimum. That's true for every class, not just mine. If you're content to just slouch through, willing to trade a better grade in the course for whatever you think is more important than your studies, you're welcome to do so. But if you want to excel, not only for the sake of a higher grade on your transcript, but also for the sake of your own intellectual development, you owe it to yourself to put in enough effort that you can honestly say to yourself at the end of the semester, "I did my best, and I learned as much as I could in that course." If you do, I'll do everything I can to make this a worthwhile experience for you.

Academic Honesty

I adhere to the Academic Honesty policy of the College. There is nothing more important to me than personal integrity — not happiness, not power, not even genetics, nothing — and I conduct myself and all of my classes in that spirit. If you're not familiar with College policy, you should be.

Tutoring

The Academic Support Center houses Disability Support and Greyhound Tutoring on the first floor of Monocacy Hall and can be reached at 610-861-1401. Greyhound Tutoring provides course-specific tutors to Moravian students, free of charge. If you would like to work with a Greyhound Tutor to boost your academic success, please request a tutor through http://bit.ly/NeedTutorMC (case-sensitive). Plan ahead! It takes 2–3 business days to connect you with a tutor. Please email Dana Wilson (wilsond@moravian.edu), Tutor Coordinator, for more information about tutoring. Please email Laurie Roth (rothl@moravian.edu), Director of Academic and Disability Support, for more information about disability support.

Accommodations

Per Moravian College policy: "Students who wish to request accommodations in this class for a disability should contact the office of Academic Support Services, located on the first floor of Monocacy Hall (extension 1401). Accommodations cannot be provided until authorization is received from the Academic Support Services office."

For reasons that are not entirely clear to me, Moravian College considers this to be a personal page. Therefore it is incumbent on me to point out that "The views expressed on this page are the responsibility of the author, Christopher Jones (jonesc-at-moravian-dot-edu) and do not necessarily reflect Moravian College or Moravian Theological Seminary policies or official positions."