ANTH 1, Sections 5 & 7 
Introduction to Physical Anthropology

Last Updated: December 11, 2006


Welcome to the Dr. M. Elizabeth Strasser's ANTH 1 home page on the World Wide Web. These electronic pages provide information for the course Introduction to Physical Anthropology taught at California State University, Sacramento.

Class Time and Location: TR, 9-10:15, 12-1:15, MND-3011

*Course Syllabus:

Course Description
Learning Objectives
Texts
Academic Honesty
Course Requirements
Course Schedule
Dates to Remember (including dates to hand in assignments and of exams)

Article Review Forms for Supplemental Readings

 

*Official Study Guide for First Exam
*Official Study Guide for Second Exam
*Official Study Guide for Third Exam
*A Painting by Francine West of the Course Topics
*Course Contacts (Office hours: Tues. & Thurs., 10:15-11:15, 1:15-1:45; or by appt.)
*Links to Course Related-Sites


Send problems/comments/suggestions to: strasser@csus.edu
Return to CSUS Home Page, Anthro. Dept. Phys. Anthro. Home Page Strasser Home Page.


Course Description

Introduction to Physical Anthropology fulfills the Area B2 (Life Forms) requirement for the General Education Program.  Covers the concepts, methods of inquiry, and theory of biological evolution and their application to the human species. There is a specific focus on molecular, Mendelian and population genetics, mechanisms of evolution, primatology, paleoanthropology, biocultural adaptations, and human variation. The scientific method serves as the foundation to the course. 3 units. (CAN ANTH 002)

 

Learning Objectives

By the end of the course, students should understand: the Scientific Method; elementary Mendelian genetics, cytogenetics, molecular genetics and population genetics; aspects of evolutionary theory, including the mechanisms of evolutionary change,  the process(es) of speciation; basic taxonomy and systematics; the place of humans within the order Primates and the place of primates within higher taxa as evidenced by comparative anatomy and genetic data; the classification and characteristics of the major taxa within the order Primates; the  paleontological context and fossil record of major taxa within the order as well as of our own lineage; and adaptive (or not) explanations for modern human variation.


Texts

Required:

Stein, Philip L., and Bruce M. Rowe

             2006  Physical Anthropology, 9th edition.  New York: McGraw-Hill.

Hens, Samantha, editor

2004    Supplemental Readings for Physical Anthropology.  Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company.

 

Recommended:

Zihlman, Adrienne

2000 The Human Evolution Coloring Book, 2nd edition.  New York: Barnes & Noble Books.

 



Academic Honesty1 If a student is found cheating in any of the assignments/exams of this class, the student will receive an F for that assignment/exam.

 1Modified from the CSUS University Manual.


Course Requirements

EXAMS

HOME-WORK

MAKE-UP EXAM POLICY

EXAM REVIEWS

    1. writing down the questions you got wrong,
    2. why you chose the wrong answer, and
    3. giving the correct answer.

EXTRA CREDIT

If any extra credit assignments are to be given, aside from the Exam Reviews, they may be used only to improve a grade by 1/3 (e.g., from A- to an A or D to D+ or C+ to B-), if and only if the numerical score allows for such a change.  In other words, Extra Credit points are not equivalent to Exam Review points.

 

As of 11/15/06, for extra credit ARFs can be done for the following articles, due by the last day of class. They are in the Reserve Book Room.

 

2. Darwin's Rib. Robert S. Root-Bernstein
8. From Pan to Pandemic. Robin A. Weiss
11. Menu for a Monkey. Karen B. Strier
24. The Gift of Gab. Matt Cartmill



 

GRADE CALCULATION


NO INCOMPLETES ARE GIVEN IN THIS COURSE


ATTENDANCE

DROP POLICY

The last day that you can drop this course using CASPER Plus is September 15.
 
 


Dates to Remember

  DATE

EVENT

  

October 10

FIRST EXAM

 

October 12

ARFs 1,3,5,6 DUE

 

November 14

SECOND EXAM

 

November 19

ARFs 9,12,14 DUE

 

December 12

ARFs 20,21,22 DUE

 

December 19

THIRD EXAM  Sec. 5, 8:00-10:00 am; Sec. 7, 12:45-2:45 pm

 


Links to Course-Related Sites
A useful Mendelian Genetics Page (needs Shockwave) (click on DNA from the Beginning)
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution
Primate Gallery (pictures & info on primate species)
The Talk. Origins Archive (e.g., creationist arguments; info on various hominid species, etc.)
Kuban's Paleo-Place (various bits about paleontology)
UC Berkeley's Museum of Paleontology
American Museum of Natural History, New York
The National Center for Science Education
Radiometric Dating: A Christian Perspective (A useful explanation)