BIOL 108 Syllabus
BIOL 108 Syllabus
Course Objectives: BIOL 108 is designed to provide first year students with an overview of the major
lineages of life on Earth, with an emphasis on evolutionary principles and classification, the history of
life, and the key adaptations of prokaryotes, protists, fungi, plants, and animals. Prerequisite: Biology
30. BIOL107 (Introduction to Cell Biology) complements BIOL108 with its coverage of cellular and
physiological biology. Policy about course outlines can be found in Section 23.4(2) of the University
Calendar.
REQUIRED Textbook: Campbell BIOLOGY by Reece et al.(2017). This is the 4th custom edition
specifically for the University of Alberta, available at the Students Union Bookstore ($167.88). Used
copies (including older versions) of this textbook are acceptable, but it will be your responsibility to
ensure that the page numbers correspond to the assigned readings. You will also need to purchase a
Biology 108 Laboratory Manual from the Bookstore.
In-class interactive software: We will be using iClickers in class regularly. It is your responsibility to
have a functioning iClicker for every class. There are no make-ups for missed quizzes or activities.
These should cover all possible forgotten/broken iClicker issues, battery problems and missed classes
(no exceptions).
In-class quizzes consist of 5 questions, which are marked. Points accumulate over the session; overall
iClicker grade will be a simple average of all the sessions. The 2 lowest quizzes of your clicker grades
will be dropped. We will also use the iClickers to record participation in group activities.
You may use any iClicker remote, though we are recommending iClicker2. These devices can be
purchased from the U of A bookstore. Alternatively, you can use your mobile device, in conjunction
with a subscription to iClicker Reef. You can purchase a discounted access code from the bookstore.
Your clicker must be registered in order for you to receive marks for using it. See eClass for detailed
instructions.
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Biology 108: Lecture A01 Fall 2017 (Luong)
Sample Questions
Sample exam questions will be presented as part of the lectures and iClicker quizzes. These are meant
to give you a feel for the style of questions and are unlikely to be identical to the questions actually on
the exam for this lecture section. There are excellent study questions at the end of each chapter in the
Campbell textbook. More details about study aids will be provided in lecture.
Laboratory
Labs start the week of September 18. All Biology 108 labs are located on the 1st floor Centre Wing of
Biological Sciences Bldg. in rooms CW 105, 109, 113, 121, & 125. You must purchase and bring to the
first lab the most recent version of the lab manual (available from the Student's Union Bookstore).
Consult the lab manual for required lab supplies.
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Biology 108: Lecture A01 Fall 2017 (Luong)
management issues, including a busy exam schedule, will not be considered valid reasons for missing
the final exam.
The deferred exam for BIOL 108 will be held on Thursday 4 January 2018, 2-4 pm (room TBA). Check
with me (LL) 48 hours prior to the deferred exam to confirm date, time and location. Note: no re-
examinations will be given (i.e., if you did write the final exam but desire to re-write), as the final
exam constitutes less than 40% of your total mark for the course. This also applies to those students
who miss the midterm exam and have the weight of the mark transferred to the final exam. See Section
23.5.5 of the University Calendar for additional information.
Mark Distribution
iClicker & online quizzes Throughout course 5%
In-class & online activities Throughout course 5%
Midterm exam October 20 (approx. 45 min in length) in class 20 %
Final exam** December 20, 2-4 pm 30 %
Laboratory Labs begin week of September 18 40 %
** Deferred Final Exam: Thursday 4 January 2018, from 2-4 pm, location TBA
Assignment of Grades: The University of Alberta uses a letter grading system with a four-point scale
of numerical equivalents for calculating grade point averages. The final grades in this course will be
determined from the total raw score (from both lecture and lab) of all the students in this lecture section.
The scores will be subdivided into the letter grading system using a combination of natural breaks in the
distribution and grade cutoffs that reflect general performance where A grades are considered
excellent, B grades good, C grades satisfactory, D a marginal pass and F a failure. This will be
done after the final total raw scores are calculated. Letter grades will NOT be calculated for individual
course requirements (e.g., midterm).
Note: the exact cut-off for the course grade will be calculated to the nearest 0.01%. Percentages within
0.40% or less of the upper limit of the cut-off will be rounded up. For example, if your final course % is
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Biology 108: Lecture A01 Fall 2017 (Luong)
84.60% and the A- cutoff is 85%, you will be bumped up to A-. However, you must be precisely 0.40%
or less, e.g., you will not be bumped up if your score is 84.59%.
Student Services
There are many resources on campus available to students who need advice, help, support, counseling,
or information. See a list of some of these resources at In addition, there is a student-run Peer Support
Centre for counseling and crisis management in Room 2-707, Students Union Building (phone: (780)
492-4268) (http://www.su.ualberta.ca/services/psc/).
All forms of dishonesty are unacceptable at the University. Any offense will be reported to the Senior
Associate Dean of Science who will determine the disciplinary action to be taken. Cheating, plagiarism
and misrepresentation of facts are serious offenses. Anyone who engages in these practices will receive
at minimum a grade of zero for the exam or paper in question and no opportunity will be given to
replace the grade or redistribute the weights. As well, in the Faculty of Science the sanction for
cheating on any examination will include a disciplinary failing grade (no exceptions) and senior
students should expect a period of suspension or expulsion from the University of Alberta.
Further information on issues related to cheating, plagiarism, and cyber-plagiarism can be found at
http://guides.library.ualberta.ca/plagiarism. Some of the major forms of inappropriate student
behaviour are defined in the Code of Student Behaviour as follows.
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30.3.2(2) Cheating: 30.3.2(2) a No Student shall in the course of an examination or other similar
activity, obtain or attempt to obtain information from another Student or other unauthorized source,
give or attempt to give information to another Student, or use, attempt to use or possess for the purposes
of use any unauthorized material.
30.3.2(2) b No Student shall represent or attempt to represent him or herself as another or have or
attempt to have himself or herself represented by another in the taking of an examination, preparation of
a paper or other similar activity. See also misrepresentation in 30.3.6(4).
30.3.2(2) c No Student shall represent anothers substantial editorial or compositional assistance on an
assignment as the Students own work.
30.3.2(2) d No Student shall submit in any course or program of study, without the written approval of
the course Instructor, all or a substantial portion of any academic writing, essay, thesis, research report,
project, assignment, presentation or poster for which credit has previously been obtained by the Student
or which has been or is being submitted by the Student in another course or program of study in the
University or elsewhere.
30.3.2(2) e No Student shall submit in any course or program of study any academic writing, essay,
thesis, report, project, assignment, presentation or poster containing a statement of fact known by the
Student to be false or a reference to a source the Student knows to contain fabricated claims (unless
acknowledged by the Student), or a fabricated reference to a source.
30.3.2(3) Misuse of Confidential Materials: No Student shall procure, distribute, or receive any
confidential academic material such as pending examinations, laboratory results or the contents thereof
from any source without prior and express consent of the Instructor.
30.3.6(4) Misrepresentation of Facts: No Student shall misrepresent pertinent facts to any member of
the University community for the purpose of obtaining academic or other advantage. See also 30.3.2(2)
b, c, d and e.
30.3.6(5) Participation in an Offence: No Student shall counsel or encourage or knowingly aid or
assist, directly or indirectly, another person in the commission of any offence under this Code.
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Biology 108: Lecture A01 Fall 2017 (Luong)