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Nov 22, 2024
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2020-2021 Scripps Catalog THIS IS AN ARCHIVED CATALOG. LINKS MAY NO LONGER BE ACTIVE AND CONTENT MAY BE OUT OF DATE!
Neuroscience Major
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The major in Neuroscience is an interdisciplinary program of 16 courses maximum.
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1. Common Core (5 courses)
2. Common Core Electives (3 courses)
Choose any 3 courses from the following:
- General Physics: PHYS030L KS , PHYS031L KS , PHYS033L KS , PHYS034L KS ; only one semester of physics may count.
- Mathematics: MATH031 SC (Calculus II or Calculus IIS PO), statistics (BIOL175 KS or PSYC103 SC , PSYC091 PI, or PSYC109 CM), or an approved equivalent course.
- Computer science: BIOL133L KS , PHYS100 KS , NEUR123 SC , NEUR123L SC , NEUR182 SC , CSCI005 HM , DS 002 SC , DS 001 SC , or an approved equivalent course.
- Research Methods: PSYC104 SC /PSYC104L SC , or PSYC092 PZ, or PSYC110/111L CM, or an approved equivalent course.
3. Course elective specializations (four courses)
A coherent grouping of four elective courses to be determined in consultation with an adviser in Neuroscience and approved by the Coordinator of the Intercollegiate Neuroscience Program. Areas in which a student may elect to specialize include, but are not limited to:
- Behavioral Neuroscience
- Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
- Clinical Neuroscience
- Cognitive Neuroscience
- Computational Neuroscience
- Developmental Neuroscience
- Motor Control, or
- Neuropharmacology
- Philosophy of Neuroscience
Students studying abroad are allowed to use a maximum of two courses towards their course elective specialization.
4. Senior Thesis (one or two courses)
A one- or two-semester Senior Thesis on a topic related to the student’s selected Neuroscience Sequence.
Please visit our website at neuro.kecksci.claremont.edu for more information on the neuroscience programs at the Claremont Colleges.
Honors Requirements
To be considered for departmental honors in neuroscience, a student must:
- Achieve a minimum grade point average of 11.0 (A-) in courses in the major;
- Complete a one- or two-semester thesis project in which the student has demonstrated excellence by making a significant contribution to the progress of the research and by producing a thesis document judged to be of honors quality by the department;
- Present an oral progress report at the end of the first semester of a two-semester thesis and a poster at the conclusion of either a one- or two-semester thesis in which the student clearly explains the rationale for the project and the conclusions that were drawn, engages the listener, and knowledgeably answers questions; and
- Attend at least six scientific seminars during the semester (each semester for a two-semester thesis) and submit a brief and clear summary of each.
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