Biology (B.S.) Biomedical Concentration

Program Overview

The Biology major provides a strong and broad foundation in biological sciences, from the molecular to the ecological level. The Biomedical concentration prepares students for medical, veterinary, dental, ophthalmological, physician assistant, and biomedical graduate research programs, as well as immediate post-graduate employment. Coursework explores cellular biology, physiology, anatomy, and specialized electives including microbiology, cancer biology, neuroscience, and immunology.  As with all Biology concentrations, supporting courses in philosophy, chemistry, physics, calculus, and statistics equip students with a versatile foundation. 

Program Learning Outcomes

Graduates from Messiah’s Biology program can:

  1. Understand the nature of science, biological molecules, cell structure and function, enzymes, metabolism, and classical and molecular genetics.
  2. Understand the diversity of animal life; comparative aspects of development, physiology, morphology; life history, behavioral ecology, and evolutionary biology of animals.
  3. Understand the diversity of plants; flowering plant anatomy, physiology, reproduction, and ecology; distribution of major plant communities with global climate patterns; biogeochemical cycles.
  4. Understand hereditary mechanisms: linkage, gene interactions and regulation, molecular genetics, mutations, and development.
  5. Understand interactions of organisms at the species, community, and ecosystem levels; evidences for modern evolutionary thought in the context of a Christian world view. 
  6. Appreciate historical, philosophical, and ethical aspects of the natural sciences.
  7. Learn the skills needed to make a professional oral research presentation using Powerpoint or similar software.
  8. Participate in investigative-style laboratory experiences.
  9. Learn to work as teams in conducting laboratory and field research.
  10. Compose lab reports in format appropriate for scientific journals.
  11. Apply and extend of basic laboratory and field skills.
  12. Skill in use of spreadsheet software such as Excel for data analysis and graphing
  13. Demonstrate proficiency in basic laboratory techniques (e.g., microscopy, dissection, slide preparation, pipetting, restriction analysis).
  14. Demonstrate familiarity with essential laboratory and field safety protocols.
  15. Be familiar with options for employment, voluntary service, and/or graduate education in biology.
  16. Understand the inter-relatedness of living organisms & humanity’s calling to creation stewardship.
  17. Understand various models that relate science and Christian faith.

Major Requirements

Complete the following for your major:

BIOL 170Cell and Animal Physiology

4

BIOL 171Biological Sciences Cornerstone

1

BIOL 172Diversity of Life and Plant Science

4

BIOL 260Genetics

4

BIOL 262Ecology

4

BIOL 495/CHEM 495Capstone: Natural Sciences

3

CHEM 105General Chemistry I

4

CHEM 106General Chemistry II

4

CHEM 309Organic Chemistry I

4

CHEM 310Organic Chemistry II

4

STAT 269Introductory Statistics

3

BIOL 260 and BIOL 262: Writing in the major requirement.

Three to four credits from the following:

MATH 108Intuitive Calculus with Applications

3

MATH 111Calculus I

4

Three credits from the following:

PHIL 101Problems in Philosophy

3

PHIL 102History of Philosophy

3

Four credits from the following:

PHYS 201Introductory Physics I

4

PHYS 202Introductory Physics II

4

PHYS 211General Physics I

4

Biomedical Concentration (17-20 credits)

 A minimum of two laboratory courses, or one laboratory course and one discipline-specific travel course (BIOL 301) must be taken from the elective groupings.
BIOL 460Physiology

4

Three to four Molecular and Cellular credits from the following:

BIOL 375Developmental Biology

3

BIOL 380Genomics and Disease

4

BIOL 416Cancer and Cellular Biology

4

BIOL 418Immunology

3

Three to four Organismal and Biodiversity credits from the following:

BIOL 325Medicinal Botany

3

OR

BIOL 4122Tropical Medicine

3

BIOL 332Plant Taxonomy and Systematics

4

BIOL 456Ornithology

4

BIOL 458Herpetology

4

 

Seven to eight credits from the following:

BIOL 265Microbiology

4

 

BIOL 301Health Care in the Developing World

3

OR

BIOL 4122Tropical Medicine

3

 

BIOL 375Developmental Biology

3

BIOL 380Genomics and Disease

4

BIOL 416Cancer and Cellular Biology

4

BIOL 418Immunology

3

BIOL 465Gross Anatomy

4

BIOL 470Neuroscience

3

CHEM 410Biochemistry I

4

QuEST Requirements

Experiential Learning requirement 0
QuEST requirements Credits
First Year Seminar 3
Oral Communication 3
Created and Called for Community (W) 3
Mathematical Sciences (MATH 108 or MATH 111) met/major
Laboratory Science (BIOL 160, BIOL 162 or CHEM 105) met/major
Science, Technology & the World waived
Two of the following (six credits total):
   Social Science, European History or U.S. History
6
Literature 3
Philosophy and Religion (PHIL 101 or PHIL 102) met/major
Arts 3
First Semester of Language 3
Second Semester of Language 3
Third Semester of Language or Cross Cultural 3
Non-Western Studies 2-3
Bible 3
Christian Beliefs 3
Wellness course 1
Ethics, World Views or Pluralism 3
QuEST requirements 42-43
Major requirements (inclusive of concentration) 67-70
Free electives 14-10
Total credits 123