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Biology explores all aspects of living organisms, their behaviors, and how they interact. This field examines every form of life, from microorganisms and fungi to plants, protists, and animals—including humans. The discipline encompasses numerous interconnected specialties like microbiology, genetics, molecular biology, ecology, evolution, physiology, taxonomy, and behavioral studies. To conduct research and reach meaningful conclusions, biologists integrate knowledge from diverse fields such as chemistry, mathematics, computer science, statistics, physics, and the humanities. Strong foundations in these areas, as emphasized by graduate programs and professional schools, equip biologists for careers in the life sciences.
The Biological Sciences Department provides a comprehensive life sciences curriculum. Course offerings cater to biology majors pursuing specific degrees, students seeking technical skills, and non-majors with a general interest in biological topics. Undergraduate programs ready students for graduate studies and various career paths. Biology graduates can pursue specialized or broad roles in laboratories, offices, field research, administration, academia, industry, government, nonprofits, botanical gardens, wildlife reserves, and zoos. In essence, biologists investigate all living things on Earth.
Graduates earning a B.S. in Biological Science from Cal State East Bay will demonstrate the ability to:
Describe fundamental biological principles, such as evolutionary mechanisms, structure-function relationships at all biological scales, homeostasis, information transfer, energy and material transformations, and the interdependence of living systems.
Use quantitative analysis to interpret biological phenomena and solve biological challenges.
Effectively convey biological knowledge through written, oral, and visual formats tailored to different audiences.
Employ scientific methods by developing testable hypotheses, gathering and analyzing data, and presenting findings.
Assess, interpret, and synthesize published scientific literature.