SC/SS 115 Ethnobotany syllabus and calendar Calendar of topics and laboratories for SC/SS 115 Ethnobotany Tuesday Thursday 01 20 Aug A101 → outdoor Introduction to Ethnobotany Final exam Presentations 📖 One 22 Aug A204 Tech in ethnobotany Text 📖 Flora 🌺 Schoology Ⓢ iNaturalist 🌿 🌼 ▶️ ▶️ ▶️ 02 27 Aug Agriculture area. Outdoor dirty. Banana patch ethnogardening Banana patch gdoc handout 29 Aug A204 iNaturalist 🌿 🌼 Introduction to iNat Plants to practice IDing ▶️ 03 03 Sep A101 Preparation for group presentations cyano, mosses, monilo, lyco 📖 Two 05 Sep A101 → westside. Outdoor hike. Wet, muddy, steep. Mosses, lyco and monilo Valley west of campus. 04 10 Sep A101 Mention observations 📄 Group presentations: cyanobacteria, mosses (bryophytes), lycophytes, monilo 12 Sep Making observations 📄 A204 Healing plant videos ▶️ 05 17 Sep A101 → Paies 📖 Three 19 Sep Healing plant individual presentations 06 24 Sep → Gym. Haruki. Outdoor dirty. Ohigan. Shunbun no hi. Sweaty. Hot. Wet. Muddy. 🔪 → exiv 26 Sep A204 Preparation gymno How to avoid death By PowerPoint ▶️ Schoology 🌲▶️ ☕▶️ 07 01 Oct LRC → Pwunso Kolonia. Outdoor Gymnosperms, plants with economic value. Pwunso botanic garden 📖 Four 03 Oct A204 Group presentations: gymnosperms Preliminary food groups food presentations. 08 08 Oct LRC → Pwunso Kolonia/IFC Island Food Community of Pohnpei. 📖 Five 10 Oct A101 → Outdoor food plants walk Plants that feed us. Planning session food presentations. Smells, memories 09 15 Oct A101 Plants as food: Each cultural group brings a traditional food to share Group presentation with food. 17 Oct iNaturalist 🌿 🌼 Making observations ▶️ Including observation fields 10 22 Oct A101 → outdoor. Vegetative morph. Leaf and stem 📖 Six Veg morph walk handout 24 Oct United Nations Day 11 29 Oct Material Culture: Thatching At gym if sunny Doakoahs en Pohnpei, Ruhk 📖 Seven 31 Oct A101 Material Culture presentations 12 05 Nov LRC → Vital [tentative] Vital CDU 07 Nov A101 [tentative] Single use plastic alts Presentation? 13 12 Nov A204 then Outdoor walk. Flowers! 📖 Eight 8. Floral morphology. Floral morph walk handout ▶️ 14 Nov A101 → walkabout. Outdoor Invasive species checklist A walk and talk 6 steps handout 14 19 Nov A101 Fruit salad worksheet. Fruit key 📖 Nine 21 Nov A204 → walkabout outside iff wx Shinrin-yoku 🌲🌳🌴 Bath iff wx... 📖🌲🌳🌴 15 26 Nov A204 iNaturalist 🌿 🌼 iNaturalist presentation preparation 28 Nov A204 iNaturalist presentations iNaturalist 🌿 🌼 16 03 Dec A204 Psychoactive plants. Piper methysticum ▶️ Kava handout K. Paul info 📖 Ten 05 Dec → Field Trip: Kava cultural ceremony Location to be determined. 17 10 Dec A101 Course evaluation Insights Outdoor walk & review campus flora 12 Dec A101 → campus Monday 4:20 to 6:20 A field practical final on campus identifying the plants and their uses.

Botanic studiesEthnographic experiences
1. Most primitive, least evolved: cyanobacteria
More complex, more evolved
2. Primitive plants: Mosses: spore capsules, spores, sperm, eggs; Monilophytes [ferns]: sori, spores, sperm, eggs; Lycophytes: cones, spores, sperm, eggs
4. Seeded non-flowering plants: Gymnosperms: cones, pollen, naked seeds
Most complex, most evolved: Seeded flowering plants (Angiosperms):
6. vegetative morphology: leaf shapes
8. floral morphology: flower shapes
9. fruit types
3. Healing plants: Plants that heal us
5. Food plants: Plants that feed us
7. Material culture plants: Plants that provide shelter, transportation, clothing, and that decorate our bodies, homes, and gardens
10. Sacred plants: Plants that entertain, inspirit,and enrapture us,plants that inspire legends.

❧ Required material: Smartphone. Textbook is online. Flora is online. Schoology is online. iNaturalist 🌿 🌼
❧ Attendance policy: Students who have more than four unexcused absences prior to the last day to withdraw with a W may be withdrawn from the course by the instructor. Exceeding four unexcused absences after the last day to withdraw with a W can result in failure of the course. Absences for medical or academic reasons can be excused by a note from a medical official or a faculty sponsor.
❧ Attendance and participation are critically important in this class. The class is in part a set of shared experiences. Being absent not only has a negative impact on your own learning, being absent has a negative impact on the social cohesion of the class as a whole. This is a participatory class.
❧ Come to class prepared having read the text, prepared to listen or take notes, and ready to learn or give a presentation and you will do well. This class is all about actively being here.
❧ Field trips, hikes, and outings: Rain or shine, on and off trail. Hikes over difficult, steep, muddy, and slippery terrain are conducted. Outdoor work days are in pouring rain or hot sun and involve sharp objects such as machetes. Plants grow where they want to, not where it is convenient for us. Plant knowledge gained on hikes is testable material: Ethnobotany is a listen, watch, experience, do, and learn field!
❧ Office hours: Monday & Wednesday 1:00 to 3:00 or by appointment. See also further contact information below.
❧ No betelnut chewing in class.
❧ Assessment: Tests and examinations include coverage of student learning outcomes on outline. Some outcomes are assessed via presentations. Grade is based on participation in course activities, performing presentations, and achievement on tests. Being here and being an active participant are crucial to success in this course.
❧ Ethnographic individual presentations are oral presentations to the class. Healing plants presentation: bring the plant. Material culture: bring the item. Fruit: bring the fruit. Some students will have to work with the instructor to find suitable material for presentations.
❧ The presentation of a traditional food is done as a group. Each culture presents a single food, bringing that food to share with the class.
❧ Photographs are taken of class presentations, hikes, field, trips, and activities. These photographs are used as part of the documentation of the course.
❧ Work phone: 320-2480 Extension 161. Cell: 926-2868 Email: dleeling@comfsm.fm, danaleeling@gmail.com
❧ Course grade is tracked in Schoology.
Program learning outcomes:
ANR 2 Demonstrate basic competencies in the management of land resources and food production.
GE 3.4 Define and explain the concepts, principles, and theories of a field of science.
GE 4.2 Demonstrate knowledge of the major cultural issues of a person's own culture as well as other cultures.
MSP 2 Demonstrate proficiency in the geographical, historical, and cultural literacy of the Micronesian region.
Course learning outcomes:
1. Identify local plants, their reproductive strategies, and morphology.
1.1 Identify local plants by local and scientific names.
1.2 Compare and contrast the distinguishing reproductive characteristics of different phyla of plants including mosses, seedless vascular plants, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.
1.3 Label the key morphological features of the different phyla of plants including mosses, seedless vascular plants, gymnosperms, and angiosperms including the morphology of the reproductive structures.
2. Communicate and describe the cultural use of local plants for healing, as food, as raw materials, and in traditional social contexts.
2.1 Communicate and describe the healing uses of local plants and the cultural contexts in which that healing occurs.
2.2 Communicate and describe the food uses of local plants and engage and describe the production processes
2.3 Communicate and describe the use of plants for transportation, for shelter, and in other material culture applications.
2.4 Engage in activities that explore the use, role, and importance of psychoactive plants within their traditional ceremonial cultural contexts.
3. Demonstrate basic field work competencies related to management of culturally useful plant resources and foods
3.1 Cultivate, maintain, and produce culturally useful plants
3.2 Engage in traditional field work with plants including the production of food plants
3.3 Be able to identify, distinguish, and remove invasive plant species