Life Sciences

Life Sciences

College of Life Sciences

Courses offered in the life sciences give students a general understanding of the fundamental principles of life that extend from the tiniest microbes to plants, animals, and human beings. Students also obtain the knowledge, skills, and motivation necessary to maintain a healthy lifestyle. Specialized courses emphasizing teaching and research in various life science disciplines are also offered. Disciplines range from basic science to applied science.

Administration

Dean: Laura C. Bridgewater
Associate Dean: Loreen Allphin
Associate Dean: Ben Crookston
Associate Dean: Michael Stark
Assistant Dean: Russell G. Nielson

Contact Information: 

5000 LSB

801-422-1458

WEBSITE

Advisement Center: 

2060 LSB

801-422-3042

lifesciences@byu.edu

WEBSITE

Departments

Student Services

The goal of the Life Sciences Student Services Center is to provide "one stop shopping for students and faculty." The center services students in five areas: advisement, assessment, career advisement, college life, and mentored experiences.

Advisement—Students are instructed in general education advisement and given assistance in creating a graduation curriculum plan for their major. Advisement is an interactive, developmental experience between students and advisors. Advisement services include change of major, academic success, graduation processes, and other specific advisement needs. LfSc 101 is offered to all new students who are exploring Life Science majors. All majors and career options are presented in this course plus basic student development principles to assist new students in adapting to BYU and becoming familiar with its resources.

Assessment—Students are informed of the importance of maintaining the university's accreditation standing. Students assist in the assessment process by providing input through surveys, exit interviews, one-year-out and five-year-out surveys, and results on national major field exams and other national and professional school admission exams.

Career advisement—Students are assisted in major exploration and basic developmental career issues. Information is provided regarding university resources for further career and major exploration.

College life—The "Empowering Others" philosophy encourages students to help and teach each other by creating a spirit of cooperation rather than competition. Study groups are fostered and organized to enhance learning. A learning facility provides tutoring services for students enrolled in essential biology courses. This walk-in area allows a student access to tutors 10–12 hours per day. Leadership opportunities for students can be enhanced through participation on the Life Sciences Student Council and participation in clubs. The college also offers scholarship opportunities to its undergraduate and graduate students.

Mentored experiences—Internships provide students with opportunities to try out their prospective careers. The center provides resources for obtaining internships as well as processing all the paperwork and awarding grants to students who desire that experience. Assisting faculty with research constitutes a mentorship. Students learn invaluable skills and problem-solving techniques from their mentors. The center can help students seeking mentored experiences.

M. L. Bean Life Science Museum

Duke S. Rogers, Director 
Leigh Johnson, Associate Director for Research and Collections 
Marta Adair, Assistant Director for Education 
2103 MLBM

Robert Johnson, Collections Manager, Herbarium 
Byron Adams, Curator of Meiofauna 
Seth Bybee, Assistant Curator of Athropods
Shawn Clark, Collections Manager, Arthropods 
Jerald Johnson, Assistant Curator of Fish 
Leigh Johnson, Curator, Herbarium 
Robert Johnson, Collections Manager, Herbarium
Randy Larsen, Assistant Curator of Birds 
Steve Leavitt, Curator of Nonvascular Cryptogams
Riley Nelson, Assistant Curator of Athropods
Duke Rogers, Curator of Mammals 
Dennis Shiozawa, Curator of Fish 
Jack Sites, Curator of Reptiles and Amphibians 
Michael Whiting, Curator of Arthropods

The Bean Life Science Museum is fully accredited with the American Alliance of Museums. A major addition and remodel of the museum was completed in 2014. Its vast teaching and research collections include more than two million arthropods, fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, birds, meiofauna and mollusks, and more than 700,000 plants, fungi, algae, and bryophytes. Specimens for these collections, which represent creative work by university faculty members and students, have been gathered from around the world, making the museum a major repository of scientific-quality, biological collections in the western United States.

The museum and its collections are utilized by university classes in biology, plant and wildlife sciences, education, art, geography, and other disciplines. The museum also maintains and manages the Lytle Ranch Preserve. Located in the northernmost extension of the Mojave Desert southwest of St. George, Utah, this 600-acre desert "classroom" is situated in a part of Utah that is unique not only for its plant and animal communities, but also for its setting at the crossroads of three major bioregions.

Public programs at the museum include temporary and permanent exhibits of natural communities that illustrate complex relationships between plants, animals, and their physical environment. Educational programs serve more than 150,000 annual visitors and provide classes and programs for public and private schools and many other organizations. Museum hours are Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. and Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The museum is closed on Sunday. Admission is free.

The Western North American Naturalist, a nationally recognized peer-reviewed natural history journal, is administered by the museum. Other museum publications include professional and popular works such as A Utah Flora, Bark and Ambrosia Beetles of South America, Snakes of Utah, and Common Rocky Mountain Lichens.