BIOL 435 - Ethnobotany
Description
Hours: Three hours lecture per week Prerequisite: BIOL 200 and Junior Standing and successful completion of Golden Four GE Areas (A1, A2, A3, B4) Definition: Ethnobotany is an interdisciplinary area that allows students to integrate science and culture as a way of understanding human reliance on plants and the environment. The course combines the study of the interaction of people and plants with a broad survey of the diversity of plants described both scientifically and culturally. Students learn about the social impact of plants on culture while becoming knowledgeable in the science, characteristics, uses, and names of the major plant phyla. This course has a substantive writing requirement.
Meeting Information
Days | Times | Room | Meeting Dates | Instructor |
---|---|---|---|---|
ARR | Online | 7/8/2019 - 8/9/2019 | Amy Denton |
Status: Closed
Class Number: 1080
Session: Extended Session 6
Units: 3.00
Class Components: Lecture
Career: Undergraduate
Dates: 7/8/2019 - 8/9/2019
Grading: Letter Grade
Class Availability
Information below is 24 hours old.
Enrollment Total: 26
Available Seats: 0
Wait List Capacity: 10
Wait List Total: 0
Textbook / Other Materials
Status: RequiredISBN: 9780078023033
Title: Plants & Society
Publisher: McGraw-Hill
Author: Levetin
More textbook information including prices
Enrollment Information
- Upper Division
- Interdisciplinary Approaches Mission Pillar
- Self Support Online
- Upper Div - B Scientific Inq & Quantitative Reason