"The Physics of Life," an undergraduate general education biophysics course
Raghuveer Parthasarathy

TL;DR
This paper details the development and implementation of a biophysics course for non-science undergraduates aimed at enhancing scientific literacy through engaging, interdisciplinary content and evidence-based teaching methods.
Contribution
It introduces a novel undergraduate biophysics course designed to improve scientific literacy among non-science majors, emphasizing interdisciplinary connections and pedagogical strategies.
Findings
Course improved students' understanding of scientific concepts.
Students gained appreciation for physics' relevance to health and disease.
The course used evidence-based teaching approaches.
Abstract
Improving the scientific literacy of non-scientists is an important goal, both because of the ever-increasing impact of science and technology on our lives, and because understanding science enriches our experience of the natural world. One route to improving scientific literacy is via general education undergraduate courses -- i.e. courses intended for students not majoring in the sciences or engineering -- which in many cases provide these students' last formal exposure to science. I describe here a course on biophysics for non-science-major undergraduates recently developed at the University of Oregon (Eugene, OR, USA). Biophysics, I claim, is a particularly useful vehicle for addressing scientific literacy. It involves important and general scientific concepts, demonstrates connections between basic science and tangible, familiar phenomena related to health and disease, and…
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