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  Biomes of the World

Hiram College

11715 Garfield Road
P.O. Box 67, Hinsdale Hall 139
Hiram, OH 44234
United States
Phone: 330-569-5160
Fax: 330-569-5381

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Biomes of the World

- Multi-Country
  Egypt
    Cairo
  Germany
    Hamburg
  India
    Jaipur
  Thailand
  • Bangkok: 
  • Bangkok
  • All Other Areas in Thailand: 
  • Surat Thani
  Turkey
    Istanbul

Term: Spring 
Dates: January 11, 2010 - March 11, 2010

Description: The program is a 12 week intensive field experience that integrates the work from three separate academic courses centered in science and writing. The program leaders, Professors David R. Anderson and Dennis J. Taylor have more than three and two decades respectively of successful 10 week study abroad programs, and three-week intensive programs involving intensive field study.

The program is also based on the experience of organizing and completing 12 successful round-the-world trips involving multiple airline, train, ship and bus segments.

All countries and major field sites are well known to the faculty who lead the courses.

The Biomes course can be used as one of the elective courses for the Biology major when taken at the 300 level for Hiram College. It may become one of the courses that can be used as an integrative experience pending department approval. The program supports general education by fulfilling general education requirements for Natural Science, Interdisciplinary and Humanities General Education requirements. Because only juniors and seniors are encouraged to enroll in the program, these requirements meet the needs of the audience who will be graduating using Hiram's general education requirements in place for juniors and seniors graduating in 2008 and 2009.

An innovative feature of this program is that students use protocols that they have learned at the James H. Barrow field station where they work with local students and scientists in performing rapid assessments of streams and wetlands. In this way the program enhances the educational program offered at the field station by showing ways it is relevant to careers and field work beyond Hiram.

Highlights: The integrative nature of the program provides a new opportunity for students to study abroad by the diversity of courses and places included. Students enroll in three courses with the central theme, the biome concept, that first captured the imagination of J.R. Forester who accompanied Captain James Cook in 1778, and that was later described by the father of plant geography, Alexander von Humboldt, a German naturalist who proposed that similar regional climates produce similar morphological (and we find now physiological) responses. Von Humboldt's studies stand the test of time today by serving as the best example of an integrative approach to understanding science that rejects the reductionist line of thinking which has dominated much of science and education in the late 20th century. Ecologists lament the loss of natural history studies in science and indeed many descriptions of modern day science wrongly describe the study of the natural sciences to a methodology that involves only the experimental method, forgetting the long and important natural history branch of science that remains central to the study of ecology. The study of ecology in the late 20th century became more inclusive with increasing understanding of human influences on natural ecosystems and ecosystem transfers as important fields of study. This 12 week integrated program champions careful observation, accurate recording of sensory perceptions and interdisciplinary integration of ideas from different fields of study, different ecological regions of the world ,and different cultures, through the Biomes (natural science) course, Travel and Nature Writing course and Science and Literature (interdisciplinary) course.

As students work their way around the globe they add personal examples recorded in their field notebooks and essays of the characteristic appearance of life that does not require an understanding of taxonomic relationships. As we enter new regions with similar biomes, students see first-hand the way that climates of intercontinental and marine regions cause the development of similar plant communities. The course concludes in Berlin, the very city where the study of plant geography began, visiting the University, the estate and the museums made famous by the work of the von Humboldt brothers and other great German and English naturalists of the 18th and 19th centuries. We will also investigate the way in which science is interpreted through literature, i.e. the interaction of science and society through works that describe human impact on the environment and the way that science influences society and vice versa.

The subtheme of Global Warming and its impact on watersheds is only natural considering that students will be studying most of the major biome types of the earth firsthand, and will be able to examine changes that are noted from studies, oral histories gathered from local people, museums and other local knowledge sources. The impact of global warming on watersheds from scientific and personal perspectives can be recorded as part of the travel writing component of the program. The emphasis on the impact of Global Warming will be on water and watershed impacts.

Degree Level: Bachelors Degree (Undergraduate)

Subject Areas :
  • Biology (General)
  • Environmental Sci. (Atmosph.)
  • History
  • Interdisciplinary
  • Cost in US$: 13,500

    Cost Include Description:
    Air Transportation to/from Cleveland, Ohio; meals, housing, entry to various activities, in-country transportation, visas

    Experience Required: yes

    Scuba certified

    This Program is open to Worldwide Participants.

    Typical Living Arrangements :
  • Group living
  • Home-stays
  • Other
  • Participants Travel in Groups

    Typically Participants Work in Groups of 10 - 20

    Application Process Involves:

    • Letters of Reference
    • Physical Exam/Health Records
    • Transcript
    • Written Application

    Hiram College's Mission Statement: The mission of Hiram College is to foster intellectual excellence and social responsibility, enabling our students to thrive in their chosen careers, flourish in life, and face the urgent challenges of the times.

    Year Founded: 1850




    Are you interested in this study abroad program? CONTACT HIRAM COLLEGE