Eastern University

Course Details

BA in Biological Studies

Course Description

The BA in Biological Studies at Eastern University prepares students for immediate entrance into laboratory or field work and careers in biology-related fields. Biological Studies students have similar requirements to the B.S. in Biology, but requires one rather than two years of Chemistry, a wider range of electives, a course in Biotechnology, and an internship. The Biology Department at Eastern University encourages all of our students to participate in an internship whenever possible, but it is not required for the B.S (although the majority of these students do internships). A successful internship experience is often very helpful in getting that first job. We work with students to find a good internships and they receive one credit for every 40 hours of the internship experience (up to 5 internship credits can apply towards the biology electives). Why Major in Biological Studies at Eastern? Personalized teaching: Our largest classes (60-80 students) are our two introductory courses. Otherwise upper level courses have approximately 20 students or less. Senior research and thesis classes are limited to 5 students. Eastern professors teach the labs as well as lectures. Adjunct professors only teach a few courses in which each brings a particular specialized expertise. Students have the opportunity for extensive faculty contact both during and outside of classes. Christian faith integration: Science is limited to what can be measured. Morality, the spiritual world, meaning, and even defining life itself, are not measurable questions. We seek to integrate a Christian worldview - truth God has revealed in the Bible - with our study of the measurable. This includes wrestling with the best responses to new knowledge and technology, whether in global climate change or genetic predictions. Labs and student research: Students have access to standard research equipment, such as laminar flow hoods for cell culture; fluorescent and scanning microscopes; thermal cyclers for PCR (polymerase chain reaction); and other tools for DNA and protein electrophoresis. In addition, Biology students have access to our Scanning Electron Microscope, one of the most heavily used laboratory instruments in cutting edge academic and industrial research areas today. The Biology Place is a study room with dedicated computers and software for our majors, where students to study or work in small groups. Field biology labs and proximity to diverse ecosystems: A strength of our program is extensive field time in our environmental-related courses, at numerous off-campus locations.The 100 acre St. Davids campus itself offers forests and wetlands for study. Eastern is within two hours of Atlantic Ocean barrier islands, salt marshes and bird migration stopovers; the biologically unique New Jersey Pine Barrens; the Appalachian Mountains, and the Pocono Plateau, which includes glacial bogs. Our immediate Philadelphia area includes serpentine barrens, five biogeographical zones; a freshwater tidal marsh; diverse examples of urban ecology, including urban garden programs and environmental remediation; many arboreta including world-famous Longwood Gardens; the world famous Baltimore Aquarium. Field trips built into our courses allow students to directly observe and study these. ‘Tropical Biology’ includes 10 days in the field in Puerto Rico. We have standard field biology equipment, and a GIS site license for ecosystem mapping and analysis. Diverse course offerings: Some of our regularly offered signature courses include Molecular Biology; Techniques in Biotechnology; Medical Parasitology; Tropical Biology; Developmental Biology; Vertebrate Biology; Medical Botany; Animal Physiology; Ornithology; Entomology; Plant Taxonomy; Cardiovascular Physiology and Pathophysiology (through the Dept/Biokinetics); Marine Biology; Evolution, Creation and the Organization of Biology; Environmental Regulation and Policy, Structural Basis of Human Disease (through the Dept/Chemistry). Coming soon: Virology; Introduction to Geology. Close to diverse research, internship and graduate study opportunities: Classes visit research programs at the Smithsonian in Washington, DC, or the Museum of Natural History (NYC), or the New York Botanical Garden, or the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences. Greater Philadelphia has a large pharmaceutical industry, including GlaxoKlineSmith, DuPont, Cepahlon, AstraZeneca, Wyeth/Pfizer, Centocor, and many smaller firms. We are within 30 min to major research and teaching hospitals such as Thomas Jefferson Univ. Hospital, the Hospital of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia,Temple University Hospital, and within an hour of Fox Chase Cancer Center, Cooper University Hospital and Christiana Hospital, as well as numerous smaller hospitals and schools. The “seven county” area has more than 90 colleges and universities (more than Boston!), many with opportunities for undergraduate biology internships, research libraries Eastern students can use, and strong graduate programs in the sciences and/or medicine. Examples of Internships: Internships have been as diverse as the career goals of our students. For example, lab- and medically-oriented students have done internships at hospitals in the Thomas Jefferson Health System, at Fox Chase Cancer Center, at the Pennsylvania State University Medical College, various pharmaceutical companies, and in public health programs in Philadelphia and Angola, Belize and Bolivia. Students aiming toward work in field biology or sustainable development have done internships such as with the Pennsylvania Dept. of Environmental Protection, Chincoteague Natl. Wildlife Refuge (VA), Jenkins Arboretum (PA), the Institute for Tropical Studies (Costa Rica), the Philadelphia Zoo, the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, the New Jersey Aquarium (Camden), Cape Henlopen State Park (DE), Sequoia Natl. Park (CA), and sustainable agriculture research in Mexico, Haiti, Rwanda and Belize. Off-campus Programs and the Au Sable Institute: Sixty Christian colleges and universities partner in offering high quality field courses in May term and Summer I and II, at locations in northern Michigan, Whidbey Island in Puget Sound, Costa Rica and India. Eastern was a founding member: courses taken at Au Sable are directly credited through Eastern. Sample courses: Aquatic Biology, Alpine Ecology, Marine Biology (in the Pacific), Marine Mammals, Conservation Biology, Tropical Agriculture and Missions, Ecological Agriculture, International Development and Environmental Sustainability. International Programs (Spanish and Biology): Students with Spanish competency equivalent to two years of college Spanish or better can study abroad at Universidad de las Americas - Puebla, Mexico, one of the best schools in Latin America for laboratory biology, chemistry and medicine. Students interested in ecology and tropical biology can study abroad in the Quetzal Education and Research Center (QERC) in Costa Rica; QERC facilitates testing for Spanish competency level, and students can receive credits for reaching basic competency, or progressing from an earlier level. The Latin American Studies Program in Costa Rica offers a Tropical Ecology track Spring semesters, combining field biology with greater depth in Spanish instruction, a 3rd study abroad option. Coming soon on Eastern’s campus: Concepts of Health and Sickness in the Hispanic World, taught through the Spanish program, and including basic medical Spanish for the clinic. International Programs and the Creation Care Study Program: Eastern helped found this program, offering study abroad Fall or Spring semesters in Belize, New Zealand or British Columbia. Courses, all built around the theme of environmental sustainability, fulfill core requirements in Humanities and Social Sciences for science majors, as well as providing a field biology elective. Internships are available in Belize.

Course Duration

NumberDuration
3year

Career outcomes

A Biology degree from Eastern University will provide students with a broad scientific background, analytical skills, and critical thinking capabilities that will allow them to thrive in whatever career area they pursue. Diverse careers exist with a Bachelor’s degree, with additional science graduate study, or combined with other training, such as Education, Business, Law, or foreign languages. Eastern University Biology alumni are successfully employed in various types of medical careers, including physicians (MDs and DOs) at Philadelphia area hospitals and elsewhere; PAs (Physicians Assistants); several licensed dentists; several who went into Nursing, and a number who are working as medical and research technicians. Some of our alumni who went to med school won highly competitive merit scholarships. Our alumni also include PhD's and Master degrees in lab-oriented sciences such as genetics, immunology, and cell biology, some working for pharmaceutical companies, others for universities. At any time, a number of our recent alumni are doing graduate studies. Others have PhD's and Master degrees in field-oriented sciences, such as ecology. Several have received outstanding peer recognition for the quality of their research. We also have alumni who teach secondary (high school) science in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Massachusetts and other locations. Two of them first taught for years at Christian high schools in (respectively), Paraguay and Fiiji, and now teach in the US. Other alumni are working in Christian missions and/or sustainable international development in Latin America and Africa. Eastern Biology Department graduates are employed in the following positions and companies or organizations: * Graduate school * Jenkins Arboretum Fellow * Lab technician at the Vitreous State Lab at the Catholic University of America and two researchers at Merck * Medical assistant, Radnor Family Practice * Assistant scientist, Janssen (used to be Centocor) * Technician at Lehigh Valley hospital * Cell culture technician in Malvern * Chemistry teacher at a college in Qatar * Research technician in Switzerland * HAS Haiti Timber Re-Introduction Project * Technician at the University of Pennsylvania–in the Dept. of Gastroenterology doing cancer and HIV research * Biology teacher at middle schools and Christian high schools * Park guide * Technician at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in a lab studying the genomic structures in early HIV-1 infection * Consultant at an ecology-based Environmental Consulting Firm specializing in rare species studies, wetland delineations, GIS/GPS and permit applications * Worker at the NJ Marine Consortium




BA in Biological Studies Eastern University