- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
AP Biology is rigorous and challenging, but Principles of Life helps lighten the load with one-of-a-kind resources for students and teachers. The foundation of the POL 2e program is a brief text that models the intent of the AP® redesigned course with more depth, less breadth, and a greater focus on concepts and applications. To help students with this often intimidating course, we created LearningCurve -- a game-like adaptive quizzing system that provides formative assessment in a friendly, low-stakes environment. And to ease the stress of planning and grading, we created a full, wrap-around…mehr
AP Biology is rigorous and challenging, but Principles of Life helps lighten the load with one-of-a-kind resources for students and teachers. The foundation of the POL 2e program is a brief text that models the intent of the AP® redesigned course with more depth, less breadth, and a greater focus on concepts and applications. To help students with this often intimidating course, we created LearningCurve -- a game-like adaptive quizzing system that provides formative assessment in a friendly, low-stakes environment. And to ease the stress of planning and grading, we created a full, wrap-around Teacher's Edition. Therein, experts in AP Biology offer point-of-use, in-the-margin teaching tips such as "Doing" Science, AP Exam Tips, Mini-Labs, Common Misconceptions, Science Literacy, and more. This textbook is available with LaunchPad. LaunchPad combines an interactive ebook with high-quality multimedia content and ready-made assessment options, including LearningCurve adaptive quizzing. See 'Instructor Resources' and 'Student Resources' for further information.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Macmillan Learning
- 2nd edition 2014
- Seitenzahl: 915
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 291mm x 240mm x 41mm
- Gewicht: 2625g
- ISBN-13: 9781464156410
- ISBN-10: 1464156417
- Artikelnr.: 48693036
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Macmillan Learning
- 2nd edition 2014
- Seitenzahl: 915
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 291mm x 240mm x 41mm
- Gewicht: 2625g
- ISBN-13: 9781464156410
- ISBN-10: 1464156417
- Artikelnr.: 48693036
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
DAVID M. HILLIS is the Alfred W. Roark Centennial Professor in Integrative Biology and the Director of the Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics at the University of Texas at Austin, where he also has directed the School of Biological Sciences. Dr. Hillis has taught courses in introductory biology, genetics, evolution, systematics, and biodiversity. He has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, awarded a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship, and has served as President of the Society for the Study of Evolution and of the Society of Systematic Biologists. He served on the National Research Council committee that wrote the report BIO 2010: Transforming Undergraduate Biology Education for Research Biologists. His research interests span much of evolutionary biology, including experimental studies of evolving viruses, empirical studies of natural molecular evolution, applications of phylogenetics, analyses of biodiversity, and evolutionary modeling. He is particularly interested in teaching and research about the practical applications of evolutionary biology. DAVID E. SADAVA is the Pritzker Family Foundation Professor of Biology, Emeritus, at the Keck Science Center of Claremont McKenna, Pitzer, and Scripps, three of The Claremont Colleges. In addition, he is Adjunct Professor of Cancer Cell Biology at the City of Hope Medical Center. Twice winner of the Huntoon Award for superior teaching, Dr. Sadava has taught courses on introductory biology, biotechnology, biochemistry, cell biology, molecular biology, plant biology, and cancer biology. In addition to Life: The Science of Biology, he is the author or coauthor of books on cell biology and on plants, genes, and crop biotechnology. His research has resulted in many papers coauthored with his students, on topics ranging from plant biochemistry to pharmacology of narcotic analgesics to human genetic diseases. For the past 15 years, he has investigated multi-drug resistance in human small-cell lung carcinoma cells with a view to understanding and overcoming this clinical challenge. At the City of Hope, his current work focuses on new anti-cancer agents from plants. H. CRAIG HELLER is the Lorry I. Lokey/Business Wire Professor in Biological Sciences and Human Biology at Stanford University. He earned his Ph.D. from the Department of Biology at Yale University in 1970. Dr. Heller has taught in the core biology courses at Stanford since 1972 and served as Director of the Program in Human Biology, Chairman of the Biological Sciences Department, and Associate Dean of Research. Dr. Heller is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and a recipient of the Walter J. Gores Award for excellence in teaching. His research is on the neurobiology of sleep and circadian rhythms, mammalian hibernation, the regulation of body temperature, the physiology of human performance, and the neuro-biology of learning. Dr. Heller has done research on a huge variety of animals and physiological problems ranging from sleeping kangaroo rats, diving seals, hibernating bears, photoperiodic hamsters, and exercising athletes. Dr. Heller has extended his enthusiasm for promoting active learning through the development of a two year curriculum in Human Biology for the middle grades, and at the college level he directed the production of Virtual labs -- interactive computer based modules to teach physiology. MARY V. PRICE is Professor of Biology, Emerita, at the University of California, Riverside and Adjunct Professor in the School of Natural Resources and the Environment at the University of Arizona. In "retirement," she continues to teach and study, having learned the joy and art of scientific discovery as an undergraduate student at Vassar College and doctoral student at the University of Arizona. Dr. Price has mentored and published with independent-research students and has developed and taught general biology and ecology courses from introductory (majors and nonmajors) to graduate levels. She has particularly enjoyed leading field classes in the arid regions of North America and Australia, and the tropical forests of Central America, Africa, and Madagascar. Dr. Price's research focuses on understanding the ecology of North American deserts and mountains. She has asked why so many desert rodents can coexist, how best to conserve endangered kangaroo rat species, how pollinators and herbivores influence floral evolution and plant population dynamics, and how climate change affects ecological systems.
PART 1: CELLS1. Introduction2. The Chemistry and Energy of Life3. Nucleic
Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes4. Cells: The Working Units of Life5. Cell
Membranes and Signaling6. Pathways that Harvest and Store Chemical Energy
PART 2: GENETICS7. The Cell Cycle and Cell Division8. Inheritance, Genes,
and Chromosomes9. DNA and Its Role in Heredity10. From DNA to Protein: Gene
Expression11. Regulation of Gene Expression12. Genomes13. Biotechnology14.
Genes, Development, and Evolution PART 3: EVOLUTION15. Processes of
Evolution 16. Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 17. Speciation 18. The
History of Life on Earth PART 4: DIVERSITY19. Bacteria, Archaea, and
Viruses20. The Origin and Diversification of Eukaryotes 21. The Evolution
of Plants22. The Evolution and Diversity of Fungi23. Animal Origins and
Diversity PART 5: PLANT FORM AND FUNCTION24. The Plant Body25. Plant
Nutrition and Transport26. Plant Growth and Development 27. Reproduction of
Flowering Plants28. Plants in the Environment PART 6: ANIMAL FORM AND
FUNCTION29. Fundamentals of Animal Function30. Nutrition and Digestion31.
Breathing32. Circulation33. Muscle and Movement34. Neurons, Sense Organs,
and Nervous Systems35. Nervous and Endocrine Control36. Water and Salts:
Excretion37. Animal Reproduction38. Animal Development39. Immunology:
Animal Defense Systems40. Animal Behavior PART 7: ECOLOGY41. The
Distribution of Earths Ecological Systems42. Populations 43. Ecological and
Evolutionary Consequences of Interactions within and among Species 44.
Ecological Communities 45. The Global Ecosystem
Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes4. Cells: The Working Units of Life5. Cell
Membranes and Signaling6. Pathways that Harvest and Store Chemical Energy
PART 2: GENETICS7. The Cell Cycle and Cell Division8. Inheritance, Genes,
and Chromosomes9. DNA and Its Role in Heredity10. From DNA to Protein: Gene
Expression11. Regulation of Gene Expression12. Genomes13. Biotechnology14.
Genes, Development, and Evolution PART 3: EVOLUTION15. Processes of
Evolution 16. Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 17. Speciation 18. The
History of Life on Earth PART 4: DIVERSITY19. Bacteria, Archaea, and
Viruses20. The Origin and Diversification of Eukaryotes 21. The Evolution
of Plants22. The Evolution and Diversity of Fungi23. Animal Origins and
Diversity PART 5: PLANT FORM AND FUNCTION24. The Plant Body25. Plant
Nutrition and Transport26. Plant Growth and Development 27. Reproduction of
Flowering Plants28. Plants in the Environment PART 6: ANIMAL FORM AND
FUNCTION29. Fundamentals of Animal Function30. Nutrition and Digestion31.
Breathing32. Circulation33. Muscle and Movement34. Neurons, Sense Organs,
and Nervous Systems35. Nervous and Endocrine Control36. Water and Salts:
Excretion37. Animal Reproduction38. Animal Development39. Immunology:
Animal Defense Systems40. Animal Behavior PART 7: ECOLOGY41. The
Distribution of Earths Ecological Systems42. Populations 43. Ecological and
Evolutionary Consequences of Interactions within and among Species 44.
Ecological Communities 45. The Global Ecosystem
PART 1: CELLS1. Introduction2. The Chemistry and Energy of Life3. Nucleic
Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes4. Cells: The Working Units of Life5. Cell
Membranes and Signaling6. Pathways that Harvest and Store Chemical Energy
PART 2: GENETICS7. The Cell Cycle and Cell Division8. Inheritance, Genes,
and Chromosomes9. DNA and Its Role in Heredity10. From DNA to Protein: Gene
Expression11. Regulation of Gene Expression12. Genomes13. Biotechnology14.
Genes, Development, and Evolution PART 3: EVOLUTION15. Processes of
Evolution 16. Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 17. Speciation 18. The
History of Life on Earth PART 4: DIVERSITY19. Bacteria, Archaea, and
Viruses20. The Origin and Diversification of Eukaryotes 21. The Evolution
of Plants22. The Evolution and Diversity of Fungi23. Animal Origins and
Diversity PART 5: PLANT FORM AND FUNCTION24. The Plant Body25. Plant
Nutrition and Transport26. Plant Growth and Development 27. Reproduction of
Flowering Plants28. Plants in the Environment PART 6: ANIMAL FORM AND
FUNCTION29. Fundamentals of Animal Function30. Nutrition and Digestion31.
Breathing32. Circulation33. Muscle and Movement34. Neurons, Sense Organs,
and Nervous Systems35. Nervous and Endocrine Control36. Water and Salts:
Excretion37. Animal Reproduction38. Animal Development39. Immunology:
Animal Defense Systems40. Animal Behavior PART 7: ECOLOGY41. The
Distribution of Earths Ecological Systems42. Populations 43. Ecological and
Evolutionary Consequences of Interactions within and among Species 44.
Ecological Communities 45. The Global Ecosystem
Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes4. Cells: The Working Units of Life5. Cell
Membranes and Signaling6. Pathways that Harvest and Store Chemical Energy
PART 2: GENETICS7. The Cell Cycle and Cell Division8. Inheritance, Genes,
and Chromosomes9. DNA and Its Role in Heredity10. From DNA to Protein: Gene
Expression11. Regulation of Gene Expression12. Genomes13. Biotechnology14.
Genes, Development, and Evolution PART 3: EVOLUTION15. Processes of
Evolution 16. Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies 17. Speciation 18. The
History of Life on Earth PART 4: DIVERSITY19. Bacteria, Archaea, and
Viruses20. The Origin and Diversification of Eukaryotes 21. The Evolution
of Plants22. The Evolution and Diversity of Fungi23. Animal Origins and
Diversity PART 5: PLANT FORM AND FUNCTION24. The Plant Body25. Plant
Nutrition and Transport26. Plant Growth and Development 27. Reproduction of
Flowering Plants28. Plants in the Environment PART 6: ANIMAL FORM AND
FUNCTION29. Fundamentals of Animal Function30. Nutrition and Digestion31.
Breathing32. Circulation33. Muscle and Movement34. Neurons, Sense Organs,
and Nervous Systems35. Nervous and Endocrine Control36. Water and Salts:
Excretion37. Animal Reproduction38. Animal Development39. Immunology:
Animal Defense Systems40. Animal Behavior PART 7: ECOLOGY41. The
Distribution of Earths Ecological Systems42. Populations 43. Ecological and
Evolutionary Consequences of Interactions within and among Species 44.
Ecological Communities 45. The Global Ecosystem
