Biological Science: Evol/Ecol (Volume 2) - Softcover

9780130932068: Biological Science: Evol/Ecol (Volume 2)
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Infused with the spirit of inquiry, Freeman's Biological Science helps teach readers the fundamentals while introducing them to the excitement that drives the science. By presenting unifying concepts and methods of analysis, this book helps its readers learn to think like biologists and gives them the tools they need for success in understanding more advanced subjects. Volume 2 of a nine-part organization covers topics under the general headings of: the origin and early evolution of life, cell functions, gene structure and expression, developmental biology, evolutionary patterns and processes, the diversification of life, how plants work, how animals work, and ecology. For science enthusiasts who want to be inspired with a sense of wonder and excitement that makes learning about biology interesting and fun.

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About the Author:

Scott Freeman received his Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Washington and was nominated for an Excellence in Teaching Award in 1989. He was subsequently awarded an Albert Sloan Postdoctoral Fellowship in Molecular Evolution at Princeton University to investigate how generation time affects the rate of molecular evolution. Dr. Freeman's research publications explore a range of topics from the behavioral ecology of nest parasitism to the molecular systematics of the blackbird family. As an affiliate faculty member at the University of Washington, he has taught courses in evolution and has played an active role in the redesign of the general biology course. He is currently teaching the majors general biology course using an inquiry-based approach that emphasizes the logic of experimental design and the mastery of core concepts required for success in upper-level courses. Dr. Freeman is the co-author of Evolutionary Analysis, which presents evolutionary principles in the same spirit of inquiry that drives research.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:

Faculty who teach introductory biology may have the most exciting and difficult job on campus. The excitement springs from the breathtaking pace of advances in the biological sciences and the wide array of training and career options that are now open to prospective majors; the difficulty lies in introducing students to an already imposing and rapidly increasing number of facts and concepts.

When I took introductory biology as an undergraduate in 1975, faculty members were coping with the information explosion by extending the length of their introductory courses and using ever-larger textbooks. Today we don't have those options. Course length is capped at one year and most texts already run in excess of 1100 pages. Over the past decade in particular, presenting a fact-based, synoptic overview of what we know about biology has become increasingly untenable.

In short, the information explosion has changed our jobs. Instead of asking students to focus primarily on memorizing facts, more and more instructors are focusing their course on teaching students how to think like a biologist.

Why a New Introductory Textbook?

I wrote Biological Science to support professors who want their students to experience a more inquiry-driven approach in introductory biology. My goal was to write a book infused with the questions and the enthusiasm for learning that drive biological research. To help students understand how biologists think, each chapter is built around a series of questions that are fundamental to the topic being addressed. While exploring each question, the presentation incorporates data for students to interpret, offers evidence for competing hypotheses, introduces contemporary researchers, refers to work in progress, and highlights what researchers don't yet know. My aim was to help you teach biology the way you do biology—by asking questions and analyzing data to find answers.

At the same time, I made a strong commitment to covering the basics. We teach students who want to become doctors, researchers, science journalists, teachers, and conservationists. We have an obligation to prepare them for success in upper division courses, MCATs, and GREs, and to introduce the canon of facts and concepts that they must master to major in biology. Instead of listing these facts and concepts in an encyclopedic manner, however, Biological Science introduces them in the context of answering a question. In this textbook, facts become tools for understanding—not ends in themselves.

In addition to finding an appropriate balance between covering facts and exploring the scientific process, the level of the presentation is crafted to be appropriate for introductory Students. Sections and sub-sections in the text begin with an overview of what question is being asked and end with commentary that helps students pull the material together. Instead of getting lost in the details of how an experiment was done, the text emphasizes why it was done and what the data mean. Because beginning students are concerned about themselves and their world, most chapters explore how the topic relates to human welfare and all chapters end with an essay inspired by medical, commercial, or environmental concerns.

The Forest and the Trees: Helping Students to Synthesize and Unify

In addition to coping with an enormous amount of content in this course, instructors have to manage its diversity. In Biological Science, the emphasis on inquiry and experimentation provides ,a unifying theme from biochemistry through ecosystem ecology. In addition, the text highlights the fundamental how and why questions of biology. How does this event or process occur at the molecular level? In an evolutionary context, why does it exist?

The majority of chapters include at least one case history of an analysis done at the molecular level. Natural selection is introduced by exploring the evolution of antibiotic resistance via point mutations in. the RNA polymerase gene of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In the diversity unit, students learn about extracellular digestion in fungi by exploring experiments on the regulation of cellulase genes. A section of the behavior chapter features research on a gene involved in fruit fly foraging behavior. These are just three of many examples.

Similarly, evolutionary analyses do not begin and end with the evolution unit. Concepts like adaptation, homology, natural selection, and tree thinking are found in virtually every chapter. Unit 1, for example, presents traditional content in biochemistry—ranging from covalent bonding to the structure and function of macromolecules—in the context of chemical evolution and the origin of life. Meiosis is analyzed in terms of its consequences for generating genetic variation and making natural selection possible. Shared mechanisms of DNA repair and pattern formation are explained in the context of gene homologies. The overriding idea is that molecular and evolutionary analyses can help unify introductory biology courses, just as molecular tools and evolutionary questions are helping to unify many formerly disparate research fields within biology.

Supporting Visual Learners

Clear, attractive, and extensive graphics are critical to our success in the classroom. To emphasize the importance of analyzing figures in biology and to support students who learn particularly well visually, the book's art program is both extensive and closely interwoven with the manuscript. Each figure originated with rough sketches that I made while working on the first draft manuscript, which Dr. Kim Quillin then revised to increase clarity and improve appearance.

Throughout this process, our intent was to build an 4rt program that is easy to read and that supports the book's focus on thinking like a biologist. A quick glance through the book should convince you that the art is as distinctive as the text. Color is used judiciously to highlight the main teaching points. Layouts flow from top to bottom and left to right, and extensive labeling lets students work through each figure in a step-by-step manner. Questions and exercises in the captions challenge students to actively interpret the graphics. The overall look and feel of the art is clean, clear, and inviting.

Serving a Community of Teachers

By de-emphasizing the encyclopedic approach to learning biology and focusing more on the questions and experimental tools that make biology come alive, our hope was to offer a book that is more readable and attractive to students and teachers alike. Embarking on an introductory course that launches a career in biology should be exciting, not anxiety-ridden. Learning concepts well enough to apply them to new examples and datasets may be more challenging for some students than memorizing facts, but it is also more compelling. By motivating the presentation with questions, and then using facts as tools to find answers, students of biology may come to think and feel more like the people who actually do biology.

I've always viewed working on this project as a gift, because it was a chance to serve the community of bright, enthusiastic, and dedicated people who teach this course. Thank you for your devotion to biology, for your commitment to your students, and for considering Biological Science. Teachers change lives.

For Students

It's difficult to imagine a more exciting time to launch a career related to biology. The advent of whole-genome sequencing and a rising interest in conservation biology are giving new momentum to a knowledge explosion that began several decades ago. From biochemistry, cell biology, and genetics to physiology, ecology, and evolution, the pace of discovery in the biological sciences is nothing short of astonishing. Your instructors are introducing you to what may currently be the most dynamic of all human endeavors.

Delving into biology through this introductory course should help you further two important goals. The first involves personal growth. The topics you'll be learning about pervade your life. Biology is about the food you eat and the air you breathe. It's about the history of life on Earth and the organisms that share the planet with us now. You'll be learning why we get sick, how we reproduce, how plants make food from sunlight. Biology is so basic that understanding it is a fundamental part of becoming an educated person. Taking this course can open your eyes, help you see and think about life in a new way, and fuel a lifelong curiosity about the natural world.

The second goal of a course like this involves a potential career path. By preparing you for more advanced classes and a major in the biological sciences, this introductory course will be a crucial first step in acquiring the background you'll need to enter a biology-related profession and help solve pressing problems in health, conservation, or agriculture. Many of the great challenges facing us today—from climate change and species extinctions to antibiotic resistance and emerging viruses—demand expertise in biology.

The purpose of this text is to help you make that important first step toward majoring in the biological sciences andtpursuing a career related to biology. Its goal is not only to be a valuable reference for the fundamentals but also to introduce you to the excitement that drives this science. The presentation focuses on the questions that biologists ask about the natural world and how they go about answering them. Its objective is to introduce the core ideas that biologists use to make sense of the massive amount of information emerging from laboratories around the world.

The overall theme in this text is to help you learn how to think like a biologist. No matter what path your career takes, it is virtually certain that you will need to evaluate new hypotheses, analyze new types of data, and draw conclusions that change the direction of your work almost daily. Many of the facts you learn as an introductory student will change, but the analytical skills you learn in this course will serve you for life. Learning to think like a biologist will prepare you for upper-level courses and make you a better professional—whether you end up as a physician, pharmacist, educator, conservationist, or researcher.

If you approach this book with an open and inquiring mind, ready to challenge knowledge even as you absorb it, then you will have done your job. If this book communicates a sense of excitement about biological science and inspires you to keep learning more, it will have done its job. Thank you for joining a great adventure.

Scott Freeman
University of Washington

Print and Media Resources for Instructors and Students

For the Instructor

Lecture Presentation Tools

INSTRUCTOR RESOURCE CD-ROM (IRCD)
The Instructor Resource CD-ROM for Biological Science simplifies your life by placing powerful, customizable tools at your fingertips. This comprehensive, easy-to-use electronic resource provides everything you need to both prepare for and present a lecture. It features all of the illustrations and and photographs from the book—both as exportable images and as prepared PowerPoint slides. The PowerPoint slides are fully editable, allowing you complete customization capabilities. The Instructor Resource CD-ROM also features hundreds of animations and activities that can be incorporated into your lecture presentation. These same animations and activities are part of a series of more comprehensive, chapter-specific animations and activities located on the Student CD-ROM. Each animation and activity can be presented either with or without text, audio narration, and self-grading quizzes. Imagine being able to put together a presentation using art from the textbook, video clips, and animations from the Student CD. Students are motivated to explore and use the media provided with their text when they see it presented to them in the classroom. This tool gives you the power to visually present and highlight a key concept from the text and then assign it as homework. All of the answers to the activities, end-of-chapter material, and website quizzes are included on the Instructor Resource CD-ROM.

TRANSPARENCY PACKAGE AND INSTRUCTOR RESOURCE KIT
Transparencies are an effective way to visually reinforce your lecture presentation. Every illustration from the text—including art, photographs, and tables—is available on four-color transparency acetates. We've put a lot of thought into how to deliver such a large number of acetates to you in a way that is easy for you to use and organize for lecture. The transparency set is three-hole-punched and organized by chapter in manila folders, which are stored in an Instructor Resource Kit file box along with the printed lecture tools from the Instructor Resource Guide. Some labels and all of the hand pointers in the test illustrations have been deleted from these transparencies to enhance projection. Labels and images have been enlarged and modifed to ensure optimal readability in a large lecture hall.

INSTRUCTOR GUIDE
Edited by Julie Palmer, University of Texas at Austin Contributors: Carole Kelley, Cabrillo College; Judith Heady, University of Michigan at Dearborn; David Pindel, Corning Community College; Susan Rouse, Emory University.

The Instructor Guide for Biological Science includes not only the traditional instructor support tools—lecture outlines and student objectives—but it also provides additional, more contemporary resources for today's teaching challenges—motivating students, reinforcing their understanding of the material, and helping them to develop critical thinking skills. These resources include chapter-by-chapter suggestions for inquiry-based classroom activities, simple demonstrations, and problems involving the data presented in a given chapter. Answers to all of the activities and problems—including answers to the figure caption questions and exercises and the end-of-chapter questions—are included in this Instructor Guide, making it easier to assign them to students. All content in the Instructor Guide is available in a printed volume or included electronically on the Instructor Resource CD-ROM.

Assessment Tools

TEST QUESTIONS (OVER 2600 QUESTIONS) AND TESTGEN EQ
The Test Questions for Biological Science have been written and edited by the author, Scott Freeman, and a team of talented instructors, to ensure the quality and accuracy of this important resource as well as its tight integration with the text. It contains a variety of questions compiled from our reviewers, top educators, and the author's own teaching experience. The Test Questions contain multiple choice questions in the following formats: factual recall, conceptual, and application/data interpretation questions that are 'in keeping with the most recent MCAT and GRE standards. The Test Questions are available as a printed volume and as part of the TestGen EQ Computerized Testing Software, a text-specific testing program that is networkable for administering tests. It allows instructors to view and edit electronic questions, export the questions as tests, and print them in a variety of formats.

Laboratory Support

SYMBIOSIS: THE PRENTICE HALL CUSTOM LABORATORY PROGRAM FOR BIOLOGY
With Symbiosis, you can custom-build a lab manual that exactly matches your teaching style, your content needs, and your course organization. You choose the labs you want from our extensive list of Prentice Hall publications or Pearso...

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  • PublisherPearson College Div
  • Publication date1600
  • ISBN 10 013093206X
  • ISBN 13 9780130932068
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages310
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