Bachelor degree in Genetics and Development at Cornell University

 

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Bachelor Degree in Genetics and Development at Cornell University

Cornell University
Bachelor degree
Genetics and Development

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The faculty members responsible for the subject matter of genetics and development believe that students who elect this Program of Study should consider themselves primarily biologists. Accordingly, students are urged to pursue a broad curriculum in the biological sciences while satisfying the requirements for the program area.

The Program of Study requires at least 13 credits chosen from a specific list of upper-level courses. Most of these courses beyond the introductory genetics course deal with current research in various aspects of genetics and development. In such courses there is usually no conventional textbook. Instead, students are expected to become familiar with the original literature dealing with the subjects under discussion. Often take-home rather than standard examinations are given so that students may exercise originality and ingenuity in answering a series of challenging questions for which there may be no single "correct" answer.

Students are encouraged to undertake independent study in a professor's laboratory. There are a large number of laboratories on campus that perform research that relate to the Program of Study in Genetics and Development. This activity affords an exposure to the disciplines of genetics and development that is almost impossible to achieve in formal course offerings. Faculty research encompasses a broad spectrum of problems and experimental organisms. A brief overview of these interests can be found below:

1. Genetic studies in baker's yeast, fruit flies, plants, and other model organisms aimed at understanding cell cycle control, signal transduction, DNA replication, DNA repair, chromosome segregation, gene expression, and virus life cycles.
2. Developmental and behavioral genetics in model organisms such as fruit flies, nematodes, zebra fish, and mice.
3. Population genetics and molecular evolution, genetics of complex traits, evolution of viruses.


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