Major Map: B.S. Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
This interdisciplinary program, composed of courses in biology, chemistry, physics and natural sciences, enables students to explore and ask fundamental questions concerning the molecular events that occur in living organisms. Coursework includes content from the atomic to the molecular to the cellular, and integrates concepts across the required disciplinary and cognate courses to yield an understanding of the structures of biological molecules, the chemical reactions involved in biological energy interconversion, the formation and organization of complex cellular structures, and the communication of biological information spatially and temporally.
Meet our other Academic Discipline Coordinators for our Component Disciplines Phyllis Freeman, PhD Discipline Coordinator for Biology, Lee E. Limbird, PhD discipline coordinator for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and Steven Damo, PhD, Discipline Coordinator for Chemistry.
The Biochemistry and Molecular Biology curriculum, including encouraged research for six of the student's eight semesters at Fisk and during the summers nationally, seeks to develop students who:
- possess a broad and fundamental understanding of chemistry and biology with particular focus on how molecules found in biological systems confer the properties of living organisms
- are able to perform the common methods and use the tools of the field, including both laboratory and computational techniques
- are able to locate, evaluate, and communicate scientific information both in writing and in oral presentations
- can design, analyze and interpret hypothesis-testing experiments
- maintain awe concerning the molecular mechanisms underlying living processes and joy in the exploration of these processes