BIO 316-A Introduction to Programming for Biologists
Course Details
- This class will meet in-person (Lectures on Tuesdays from 5:30 – 6:45 p.m.; lab on Thursdays from 5:30 – 7:50 p.m.)
- 8 weeks | May 28 to July 19, 2024
- 3 credits | $1,875
- Last day to register: May 21, 2024
- Prerequisites: BIO 101 or BIO 102
Course Overview
Computers are essential for many aspects of biology. Basic programming is required for everything from accessing and managing data to statistical analysis and modeling. This course will provide an introduction to data management, manipulation, and analysis, with an emphasis on biological problems. The course will be taught using R, but the concepts learned will easily apply to other programming languages that are common in the field of Bioinformatics.
Course Advantages
Regardless of your academic specialty, computer literacy is both extremely useful and highly sought after in virtually all career paths. Data science in particular is valuable as it sits at the intersection of computer skills and some other subject area. Data scientists then are a vital component of any discipline-specific work as they empower teams to rigorously and reproducibly uncover patterns and test hypotheses. This course aims to give you a primer on data management best practices, analytical processes, and reproducible coding strategies. There will be opportunities to practice communication of technical concepts to a non-specialist audience. Students will complete this course with a public-facing portfolio of the coding products they produce and will get advice on how best to leverage this in job or graduate school applications.
Additional Information
Faculty will contact all students after the Tuesday, May 21, registration deadline.
About the Instructor
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