Free Term Papers on Advanced Biology

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> Religion >> Advanced Biology

We have many free term papers and essays on Advanced Biology. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Advanced Biology

    Advanced Biology. Josh Wienczkowski EN 101 Saunier November 21, 2005
    Documentation, "Advanced Biology" "There is no God! How do you ...

  2. Why Are Living Organism So Diverse ?

    ... References - Campbell, Reece, Biology International edition 2005, Pearson publish
    2005 - Mary Jones and Geoff Jones, Advanced biology, Cambridge publish 2004 ...

  3. Effects On The World

    ... Biology Core - Mike Bailey and Keith Hirst Encarta 98 Deluxe encyclopedia Comptons
    Interactive Encyclopedia Heinemann Advanced Biology - Ann Fullick Farmers ...

  4. Advanced Nursing Practice

    ... & working conditions, health services, personal health practices, and biology &
    genetic ... In an academic setting, advanced nurses are involved in classroom ...

  5. Biology Reproductive Miracles

    Biology Reproductive Miracles. ... Whether we like it or not the world is becoming
    technological advanced, the procedures for the advancement of human production is ...

View More Papers...

Advanced Biology

Submitted by chimesjr21 on February 19, 2007

Category: Religion
Words: 1298 | Pages: 6
Views: 212
Popularity Rank: 55,624
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Josh Wienczkowski
EN 101 Saunier
November 21, 2005
Documentation, "Advanced Biology"
"There is no God! How do you explain the evolution of monkey to man?! With some story of Adam and Eve?! I bet there's a virgin that gave birth to a mythical figure, am I right?" The view of an analytical atheist, only fourteen. That was me in an argument with my parents over grades that seemed to follow the annual trend of slipping. I was young, ignorant and confident of my superiority in intellectual dialogue. I also had the audacity to not only question a religion that had been in existence for over two thousand years, but to castigate my parental units for their faulty parenting on my behalf. "You never brought me to church, not once! So you're trying to tell me that because of my lack of religiosity, I'm doing bad in school?! No, bad things happen to bad people because the world gets it's own revenge in fate. So you have cancer, where's your God now?" A feeling of "I won this round" through the silence and shock impressed on their faces was accomplished. Judith Ortiz Cofer, teacher of literature and writing at the University of Georgia in Athens writes a similar experience in "Advanced Biology" (Rites of Passage, Judie Rae and Catherine Fraga, eds. Singapore: Thomson and Heinle, 2002. 228-234) "…that was the harshest thing I could have said to anyone…my cheek was burning from the slap and I wanted to hurt her" (233).
I was in the excelled classes; the classes for the awkward teenagers to shine like their faces from a new biological phenomena, puberty. One class I grew immensely interested in was Advanced Biology and AP Human Anatomy. The topics we discussed were those unavailable to the basic biology student who, as in Cofer's writing "…were looking at single-cell organisms under the microscope…a process as unexciting as watching a little kid blow bubbles" (230). The ideology of evolution and sexual reproduction wasn't...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!