Three† STEM Breadth courses, selected from the list below. Breadth courses may not be double-counted as Foundation or Elective courses. Courses should be selected in consultation with a Department of Natural Sciences advisor. Note that some courses in this list may be required pre-requisites for some upper division biology courses.
One introductory course in computer programming (BIOL 099 KS, CS 051 CM, DS 001 SC, CS004 PZ, CS 005G HM, or equivalent).
One math course for which MATH 030 or higher is listed as a prerequisite
One upper division Environmental Science course taught by the Department of Natural Sciences (e.g., EA100KS, EA103KS, EA104KS)
One course in the history, philosophy, or ethics of science (e.g. HIST 082 HM, PHIL 103 PZ, PHIL 038 PO, PHIL 035 CM, ANTH 123 PO, HIST101AC PO, HIST 101E PO, BIOL 047 PO, HIST 081 HM)
NEUR 125 JT: Minds, Brains, and Programs
Six‡† Biology Elective courses, numbered 100 or higher, including at least three laboratory courses (indicated by the “L” subscript). The following courses also count as biology electives: CHEM177KS, NEUR 103 KS, NEUR 148L KS, NEUR 149 KS, NEUR 161 KS, NEUR 181 KS, SCI 119 CM. Other courses may count as well, please consult your advisor. Elective courses may not be double counted as foundation or breadth courses.
Senior Thesis in Biology, complete one of the following options. Students must register their thesis plans with the Department of Natural Sciences during the spring semester of their penultimate year.
* Note: Students wishing to continue their education in biology-related graduate or professional school programs may need to supplement this basic curriculum with additional course work in science. Department faculty should be consulted for advice at the earliest possible opportunity.