Tag Archives: Michael Muehlenbein
Sabbatical is Here!
Have I started relaxing yet? Everyone asks me this. Do y’all not know me? We just arrived at my in-laws for the holiday, & I’m already thinking about how to fill my days. I don’t relax well. But I am … Continue reading
Posted in American Association of Physical Anthropologists, Anthropology, Biological Anthropology, Christopher Lynn, Education, Evolution & Pop Culture, Evolution Outreach, Human Biology Association, Sabbatical, Southeastern Evolutionary Perspectives Society
Tagged American Samoa, Big Red Earth, Costa Rica, Dustin Eirdosh, Erik Peterson, EvoKids, Evolution Education in the American South, Greg Batchelder, HBERG, immune response, Michael Muehlenbein, Michaela Howells, SEEPS, Signaling theory, Susan Hanisch, tattooing, Tisa's Tattoo Festival, Transcendental Medication, UA in Oxford, Zika
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Notes on Improving a Graduate-Level Course in the Principles of Physical Anthropology
This semester I redesigned the graduate-level physical anthropology course I teach. Last time around (which was the first time teaching a full-on grad course for me), I taught it as a seminar, based largely around my predecessor Professor Emeritus Jim Bindon‘s … Continue reading
Posted in Activities, Anthropology, Biological Anthropology, Evolution in Higher Education, Evolution in the Classroom, Primates
Tagged academic blogging, course improvements, essay writing, Human Evolution Source Book, Human Evolutionary Biology, John Hawks, Michael Muehlenbein, Primate Anthology
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