Office of the Dean April 2016 University of Toronto Scarborough New Course Proposals This template should be used to bring forward all proposals for new undergraduate courses for governance approval. Please use a separate form for each new course, and submit in MS Word format. Course Code: All new course codes must be approved by Naureen Nizam in the Registrar’s Office. Academic units must provide email evidence that the course code has been approved when they submit their proposal. Course Title: Earliest course start date: April 1, 2017 Unit where the course will be housed: Discipline: Departmental Contact: Divisional Contact: Annette Knott, Academic Programs Officer aknott@utsc.utoronto.ca Date of this version of the proposal: DEAN’S OFFICE USE ONLY: RESOURCE IMPLICATIONS QUESTIONS/CONCERNS 1. Calendar Copy Provide a complete entry for the course as it will appear in the Calendar. Consider carefully each of the following elements, and ensure your information appears in the order shown below. i. Course Code and Title New Course Proposal 1 Office of the Dean April 2016 ii. iii. iv. v. vi. vii. viii. ix. All new course codes must be approved by Naureen Nizam in the Registrar’s Office. Academic units must provide email evidence that the course code has been approved when they submit their proposal. Course Description Course descriptions should not exceed 50 words. Prerequisite: Is a course (or other qualification) that students must pass prior to enrolling in the described course. There should be sound pedagogical reasons for including a prerequisite. Are any of identified prerequisites from other academic units? If yes, please provide evidence of consultation. Corequisite: Is a course (or other qualification) that students must either take concurrently with the described course, or have passed prior to enrolling in the described course. There should be sound pedagogical reasons for including a corequisite. Are any of identified Co-requisites from other academic units? If yes, please provide evidence of consultation. Exclusion: Is a course that has significant overlap with the described course. Students who have passed an excluded course, may not take the described course for credit. Do not forget to consider both FAS and UTM exclusions. Recommended Preparation: Refers to preparation beyond the identified prerequisites and corequisites that is beneficial to students taking the course; e.g., specific high-school courses. Enrolment Limits: If you are requesting an Enrolment Limit, in your rationale please explain why it is necessary. Breadth Requirement Category: All new courses must be assigned a single Breadth Requirement category from the following options: o Arts, Literature & Language o History, Philosophy & Cultural Studies o Social & Behavioural Sciences o Natural Sciences o Quantitative Reasoning NOTE: Any additional, non-curricular information; e.g. “Priority will be given to students in the XXX program.” [Example: delete as you complete the form; please disable all hyperlinks] BIOB12H3 Cell and Molecular Biology Laboratory A practical introduction to experimentation in cell and molecular biology. Six modules will introduce students to concepts and techniques in the general preparation of solutions and buffers, microbiology, molecular biology, biochemistry, microscopy and data manipulation and communication skills. This core laboratory course is the gateway for Cell & Molecular biology New Course Proposal 2 Office of the Dean April 2016 specialists to upper level laboratory offerings. Prerequisite: CHMA10H3 and CHMA11H3 Corequisite: BIOB11H3 or BIOB10Y3 Exclusion: BIO215H, (BGYB12H3) Breadth Requirement: Natural Sciences Note: Priority will be given to students enrolled in the specialist programs in Applied Microbiology, Cell and Molecular Biology (Co-op and non-Co-op), Biological Chemistry and the major program in Biochemistry. Additional students will be admitted as space permits. 2. Rationale Explain why this course is being proposed (please do not simply repeat or restate your course description). Include the following elements: A description of how the proposed course fits into the unit’s overall curriculum; i.e., for which program(s) has the course been designed and what is its role within this/these programs? A description of any similar courses taught at UTSC and the wider U of T. A description of any distinctive or innovative elements. Does the proposed course make any existing courses redundant? If yes, explain how, and submit the appropriate course deletion form. 3. Learning Outcomes Describe the expected learning outcomes for the course, and indicate how the course learning outcomes will support program learning outcomes (be specific). Learning outcomes define what students will know, and be able to do, after successful completion of the course. They include both general skills such as communication, and also subject-specific objectives such as statistical analysis. Briefly describe the topics to be covered in the course (point form is acceptable). Describe the methods of assessment and indicate how they will support the course learning outcomes. New Course Proposal 3 Office of the Dean April 2016 4. Resources: Academic units should bear in mind that any additional resources needed must have been secured before the proposal can be moved into governance. The Vice-Dean will shepherd approval of these resources. Please describe the resources available within the academic unit to mount this course. In particular, consider the following: Faculty: o Will the course be taught by an existing faculty member? If yes, what impact will this have on his/her current teaching load? o Will the course require part-time or sessional faculty on either a temporary or on-going basis? If yes, how will the unit budget for this? T.A. Support: o Does the course require T.A. support? If yes, how will the unit budget for this? Space/Infrastructure: o Does the course require any space or infrastructure support that is not covered by the unit’s budget? If yes, how will the unit budget for this? 5. Consultation: Please give a detailed description of all the consultation that has taken place regarding this proposed course. In particular, address consultation with supervisors of programs, within the unit, and, where necessary, outside of the unit. 6. Governance Process: Levels of Approval Required Departmental Curriculum Committee Date [NOTE: All new courses must be approved by your departmental/unit curriculum committee. Proposals that have not been explicitly approved will not be reviewed by the Dean’s Office.] UTSC Academic Affairs Committee New Course Proposal 4