BIAN3119 Regional Topics in Nutrition, Disease and the Human Environment
Later Year Course
| Offered By | School of Archaeology and Anthropology |
|---|---|
| Academic Career | Undergraduate |
| Course Subject | Biological Anthropology |
| Offered in | Second Semester, 2012 |
| Unit Value | 3 units |
| Course Description |
This course is designed to be taken in conjunction with Nutrition, Disease and the Human Environment, and develops the theme of that course. Special attention in tutorials and written work will be given to developing a focus on a specific region or population group, and/or on the human biology of poverty, underdevelopment and marginalization. The course is open to pass and intending honours students and the latter are especially encouraged to take it. |
| Learning Outcomes |
By the end of this course, you should be able to · Formulate with a high degree of independence a specialized question on the nutrition, health, and/or environmental stress and adaptability of a geographically, socio-culturally, socio-economically or biologically defined human population, suitable for in-depth investigation via the published scholarly literature · Conduct independent scholarly literature research in sufficient depth to form a basis for investigating a specialized research question in the field · Examine published data in depth and draw on such data from a variety of sources to form an independent argument that is comparative, analytical, critical where appropriate, and evaluative, in answer to a self-set question in the field · Communicate convincingly an original argument in the field with attention to both its logical coherence and its basis in empirical research, both in oral and written forms · Participate critically and insightfully in the discussion of peers' work in the field |
| Indicative Assessment |
Tutorial work (including oral presentation) (40%), and a 3,000-word essay (60%). |
| Workload |
Normally offered in the same semester as BIAN2119. |
| Areas of Interest | Anthropology and Biological Anthropology |
| Requisite Statement |
Concurrent enrolment in, or previous completion of BIAN2119 Nutrition, Disease and the Human Environment. |
| Preliminary Reading |
Harrison, G., Tanner, J., Pilbeam, D. and Baker, P. Human Biology, Part IV, 3rd edn, Oxford UP, 1988. Aschroft, F. Life at the Extremes. HarperCollins, 2000. McMichael, T. Human Frontiers, Environments and Disease, Cambridge UP, 2001. |
| Majors/Specialisations | Anthropology and Biological Anthropology |
| Science Group | C |
| Academic Contact | Dr Robert Attenborough |
The information published on the Study at ANU 2012 website applies to the 2012 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2011 website.




