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Nov 26, 2024
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2022-23 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Biochemistry, B.S.
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Return to: College of Basic and Applied Sciences
Department of Chemistry
615-898-5466
Paul Kline, program coordinator
Paul.Kline@mtsu.edu
A Biochemistry degree can not only prepare students for professional careers as chemists; it may also serve as the basis for work in areas outside pure chemistry, such as materials science, medicine and other health-related fields, nutrition, pharmacology, patent law, business, and environmental science, to name a few.
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Degree Requirements
General Education |
41 hours |
Major Requirements |
55 hours* |
Supporting Courses |
12 hours* |
Electives |
12-23 hours |
TOTAL |
120 hours |
*This program requires courses that can also fulfill requirements of the General Education curriculum. If program requirements are also used to fulfill General Education requirements, the number of elective hours will increase.
General Education (41 hours)
General Education requirements (shown in curricular listings below) include courses in Communication, History, Humanities and/or Fine Arts, Mathematics, Natural Sciences, and Social/Behavioral Sciences.
The following courses required by the program meet General Education requirements:
Major Requirements (55 hours)
Supporting Courses (12 hours)
Electives (12-23 hours)
- A minimum of 36 hours must be at the 3000/4000 level
Curriculum: Biochemistry
Curricular listings include General Education requirements in Communication, History, Humanities and/or Fine Arts, Mathematics, Natural Sciences, and Social/Behavioral Sciences categories. NOTE:
Included in the electives will be the hours necessary for the completion of the required 36 upper-division hours for graduation requirements and the necessary hours to satisfy the 120-hour graduation requirement.
NOTE 1: A student who has had little or no high school chemistry or is not satisfied with his/her high school chemistry should first take CHEM 1010 /CHEM 1011 before taking CHEM 1110 /CHEM 1111 .
NOTE 2: A student who has a sufficiently high score on the ACT Mathematics test may begin with MATH 1910 . If the background in math is weak, MATH 1710 should be taken before MATH 1730 .
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Return to: College of Basic and Applied Sciences
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