The Biology Department offers a balanced curriculum. Students study life at all levels - from molecules to cells, from microorganisms to plants and animals, and from individuals to populations. With the help of faculty advisors, students choose courses that fulfill both the degree requirements and their individual goals. The biology curriculum comprises slightly more than twenty-five percent of the course work required for graduation.
Biology majors begin with a five quarter sequence of required biology courses two of them with laboratories. The first three quarters focus on ecology,evolution physiology & genetics. The last two quarters students have "hands on" opportunity to learn about these subjects in a laboratory environment. After completing the core courses, students choose seven or more upper-division courses from a long list of electives.
Courses include strong writing components, experiments with modern equipment, and the critical analysis of data and scientific literature. Laboratory sections enroll twenty-four or fewer students, promoting close interactions between students and their professors. Assignments often require students to present their findings utilizing styles of professional scientific meetings or journals. Such activities prepare students for their future careers by developing the critical thinking and language skills needed by scientists.
Submissions from 1997
Use of Dominant Negative Constructs to Modulate Gene Expression, Giorgio Lagna and Ali Hemmati-Brivanlou
Identification of the fliI and fliJ Components of the Caulobacter Flagellar Type III Protein Secretion System, Craig Stephens, Chris Mohr, Charles Boyd, Janine Maddock, James Gober, and Lucy Shapiro
The CcrM DNA Methyltransferase Is Widespread in the Alpha Subdivision of Proteobacteria, and Its Essential Functions Are Conserved in Rhizobium meliloti and Caulobacter crescentus, Craig Stephens, Rachel Wright, and Lucy Shapiro
Neural Induction in the Frog Xenopus laevis, Daniel Weinstein, Chenbei Chang, Giorgio Lagna, and Atsushi Suzuki
Concentration-dependent patterning of the Xenopus ectoderm by BMP4 and its signal transducer Smad1, Paul A. Wilson, Giorgio Lagna, Atsushi Suzuki, and Ali Hemmati-Brivanlou
Submissions from 1996
Partnership between DPC4 and SMAD proteins in TGF-β signalling pathways, Giorgio Lagna, Akiko Hata, Ali Hemmati-Brivanlou, and Joan Massagué
A cell cycle-regulated bacterial DNA methyltransferase is essential for viability, Craig Stephens, Ann Reisenaur, Rachel Wright, and Lucy Shapiro
Caulobacter Lon protease has a critical role in cell-cvcle cbntrol of DNA I methylation, Craig Stephens, Rachel Wright, Gary Zweiger, Lucy Shapiro, and M.R.K. Alley
Coordinate Cell Cycle Control of a Caulobacter DNA Methyltransferase and the Flagellar Genetic Hierarchy, Craig Stephens, Gary Zweiger, and Lucy Shapiro
Submissions from 1994
Is group living an antipredator defense in a facultatively communal webspinner?, Janice Edgerly-Rooks
Cloning and Characterization of an Evolutionarily Divergent DNA-Binding Subunit of Mammalian TFIIIC, Giorgio Lagna, Robert Kovelman, Jun Sukegawa, and Robert G. Roeder
Overlapping transcription by RNA polymerases II and III of the Xenopus TFIIIA gene in somatic cells, Ernest Martinez, Giorgio Lagna, and Robert G. Roeder
Submissions from 1992
Two mechanisms for growth inhibition by elevated transport of sugar phosphates in Escherichia coli, Robert J. Kadner, G. Patrick Murphy, and Craig Stephens
Essential cysteines in 3-deoxy-d-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase from Escherichia coli., Craig Stephens and Ronald Bauerle
Submissions from 1991
Analysis of the metal requirement of 3-deoxy-D-arabino-heptulosonate-7-phosphate synthase from Escherichia coli., Craig Stephens and Ronald Bauerle
Submissions from 1990
HrpF, a human sequence-specific DNA-binding protein homologous to XrpFl, a Xenopus Iaevis oocyte transcription factor, Giorgio Lagna, Fabrizio Loreni, Elena Beccari, and Francesca Carnevali
Submissions from 1988
Maternal behaviour of a webspinner (Order Embiidina): mother–nymph associations, Janice Edgerly-Rooks
Submissions from 1987
Colony composition and some costs and benefits of facultatively communal behavior in a Trinidadian webspinner (Embiidina: Clothodidae), Janice Edgerly-Rooks
Maternal behavior of a webspinner (Order Embiidina), Janice Edgerly-Rooks
Submissions from 1986
A new braconid genus (Hymenoptera) parasitizing webspinners (Embiidina) in Trinidad, Scott Shaw and Janice Edgerly-Rooks
