Indicative Content
This module provides learning opportunities that enable you to acquire the skills and qualities that will enhance your prospects, horizons and personal success, thus preparing the you for the expectations of the world of work. The foundations of being able to ability to carry out inquiry based learning and critical analysis will be developed. Your work ready and employability skill set will be enhanced helping give you the technological, digital and information literate underpinning expected of graduates today. Within the scientific framework we will help you begin to understand the importance of being enterprising and entrepreneurial and strengthen your ability to apply graduate attributes to a range of life experiences to facilitate life-long learning.
Workshops and lectures will introduce and develop the core skills associated with HE study with an emphasis on developing you as a `Bioscientist' in the broadest sense.
The module will principally consider the genetic transfer mechanisms of prokaryotes and eukaryotes and the resulting patterns of diversity. Analysis of basic Mendelian inheritance patterns will be explored together with an appreciation of the impacts of gene transfer and how they impinge at the population level. You will also be introduced to basic epigenetic information transfer.
Core practical laboratory and analysis skills will be introduced including the fundamentals of statistics as applied within the Biosciences. These sessions will include the nature of the scientific method, types of data, descriptive statistics and the fundamentals of inferential statistics. Basic practical and numerical based competencies will be assessed during the learning sessions.
Lectures on the fundamental properties that underpin life such as basic chemical structures, heat, energy and light will highlight the interdisciplinary nature of science. This, together with an understanding of emergent properties, will ensure you will be prepared to maximise your achievement within your developing field of study.
The module will have an evolutionary backbone with material delivered to help explore this central core concept of Bioscience, its mechanisms and how it can be applied in the various fields of Biological endeavour.
Activities during the face to face time and via Blackboard will provide a means of support where you will be able to reflect upon your development, feedback and progression within your studies. These sessions will enable you to refine personal strategies to maximise your potential and will explicitly provide support for the development and preparation of the summative reflective portfolio.
Texts
Reed, R., Weyers, J. and Jones, A. (2016) Practical Skills in Biology, 6th ed. Pearson
Campbell, N.A., Reece, J. B., Urry, L., Cain, M.L., Wasserman, S.A., Minorsky, P.V. and Jackson, R.B. (2014) Biology: A Global Approach 10th ed. Pearson
Both are available in electronic format via Library
Resources
Equipped lecture room and equipped laboratory (access to interactive technology in all teaching rooms
Learning Outcomes
1. Carry out inquiry based learning and critical analysis by demonstrating an awareness of personal responsibility for your own learning as a professional scientific practitioner.
Problem Solving
Reflection
2. Demonstrate competence in the basic experimental and laboratory skills and approaches appropriate to the subject(s) studied.
Application
3. Explain and apply a range of mathematical, data handling and statistical techniques that underpin practice within the Biosciences.
Analysis
4. Display the ability to safely work in a team to develop, execute and present the outcome of an ethically considered investigation appropriate to the level of study.
Communication
5. Recognise the interdisciplinary nature of science with particular reference to the underlying knowledge of physics and chemistry necessary to support understanding of biological, biochemical and biophysical processes.
Knowledge and Understanding
6. Demonstrate knowledge of the basic genetic principles relating to, and evolution of, life, together with the ability to describe and analyse patterns of inheritance and genetic interactions and explain the links to transmission of biological information and the resulting methods and principles underlying taxonomy and classification.
Knowledge and Understanding
Learning
Assessment Details
There are Three aspects of assessment
50% Product orientated Portfolio of Practitioner Evidence. A series of both factual and practical based activities where a basic competence needs to be demonstrated. These are linked to the learning activities, the majority happen "in situ" and are to help you monitor your experiential learning. They will also provide valuable on-going information for integration into the tutorial programme. (Learning outcome 1,2, 3, 5 and 6)
30% Process orientated Reflective PDP portfolio. (This element needs to be passed). It will include: An initial and final SWOT analysis. A feedback diary highlighting "ways forward" from self, peer and staff feedback. A reflective skills development statement/review highlighting areas for further personal development. (Learning outcomes 1)
20% Group presentation of a poster displaying the outcome of a team executed mini-research project. (Learning outcomes 2 & 4) [FINAL]
Additional Assessment Details
Formative feedback/assessment will occur via self and peer assessed feedback whilst working through practicals and workshops. In addition feedback on completion of product portfolio elements will provide formative input.
Learning Strategies
The emphasis is upon `learning by doing', where learning takes place through your experience, social interaction and reflection. The learning programme is reflecting the view that learning can take place outside as well as inside the classroom. It will facilitate scientific interaction with the world in general and will allow you have the opportunity to `try out' broader graduate skills within your own subject specialism.
Independent Study Hours
Preparation for workshops and team activities:140 hours. Assessment preparation and execution: 80 hours.
Web Descriptor
This module provides learning opportunities that enable you to acquire the skills and qualities that will enhance your prospects, horizons and personal success, thus preparing the you for the expectations of the world of work. The foundations of being able to ability to carry out inquiry based learning and critical analysis will be developed. Your work ready and employability skill set will be enhanced helping give you the technological, digital and information literate underpinning expected of graduates today. Within the scientific framework we will help you begin to understand the importance of being enterprising and entrepreneurial and strengthen your ability to apply graduate attributes to a range of life experiences to facilitate life-long learning.
Workshops and lectures will introduce and develop the core skills associated with HE study with an emphasis on developing you as a `Bioscientist' in the broadest sense.
The module will principally consider the genetic transfer mechanisms of prokaryotes and eukaryotes and the resulting patterns of diversity. Analysis of basic Mendelian inheritance patterns will be explored together with an appreciation of the impacts of gene transfer and how they impinge at the population level. You will also be introduced to basic epigenetic information transfer.
Core practical laboratory and analysis skills will be introduced including the fundamentals of statistics as applied within the Biosciences. These sessions will include the nature of the scientific method, types of data, descriptive statistics and the fundamentals of inferential statistics. Basic practical and numerical based competencies will be assessed during the learning sessions.
Lectures on the fundamental properties that underpin life such as basic chemical structures, heat, energy and light will highlight the interdisciplinary nature of science. This, together with an understanding of emergent properties, will ensure you will be prepared to maximise your achievement within your developing field of study.
The module will have an evolutionary backbone with material delivered to help explore this central core concept of Bioscience, its mechanisms and how it can be applied in the various fields of Biological endeavour.
Activities during the face to face time and via Blackboard will provide a means of support where you will be able to reflect upon your development, feedback and progression within your studies. These sessions will enable you to refine personal strategies to maximise your potential and will explicitly provide support for the development and preparation of the summative reflective portfolio.