| FLOYD HAYES |
| TEACHING EXPERIENCE |
| TEACHING PHILOSOPHY [click here] HALL OF SHAME: STUDENT BLOOPERS [click here] COURSES TAUGHT AT PACIFIC UNION COLLEGE, CALIFORNIA (through spring 2009) Animal Behavior (BIOL 328; 4 quarter credits) 5 quarters, 2005-2009 Biological Foundations (BIOL 112; lab only, 1 quarter credit) 8 quarter sessions, 2004-2007 Conservation Biology (ENVR 360; 4 quarter credits) 1 quarter session, 2008 Energy and Climate Change (ENVR 361; 4 quarter credits) 1 quarter session, 2009 Environmental Science (GSCI 345; 3 quarter credits) 17 quarters, 2003-2008 Marine Science (BIOL 331; 4 quarter credits) 6 quarters, 2003-2008 Natural History of California (BIOL 227; 4 quarter credits) 6 quarters, 2004-2009 Ecology (BIOL 233; 4 quarter credits) 6 quarters, 2003-2008 Pollution and Environmental Quality (ENVR 362; 4 quarter credits) 1 quarter, 2009 Vertebrate Biology (BIOL 323; 4 quarter credits) 5 quarters, 2005-2009 Vertebrate Natural History (BIOL 323; 3 quarter credits) 1 quarter, 2004 TEACHING LOADS AT PACIFIC UNION COLLEGE 2008-2009 32 quarter credits 2007-2008 32 quarter credits 2006-2007 34 quarter credits 2005-2006 31 quarter credits 2004-2005 31 quarter credits 2003-2004 26 quarter credits COURSES TAUGHT* AT THE UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST INDIES, ST. AUGUSTINE, TRINIDAD Animal Behaviour, in part (Z33E; 4 semester credits) 3 semesters, 1999-2001 Caribbean Island Ecology, in part (Z24A; 4 semester credits) 5 semesters, 1997-2002 Conservation Biology, in part (Z36B; 4 semester credits) 5 semesters, 1998-2001 Evolution and Biosystematics, in part (BL36B; 4 semester credits) 3 semesters, 2000-2002 General Ecology and Biometry, in part (BL11G; 6 semester credits) 5 semesters, 1998-2002 Science for Management of Tropical Ecosystems, in part (NS60H; 4 semester credits) 2 semesters, 2000-2001 Science, Medicine and Technology in Society, in part (FD12A; 4 semester credits) 2 semesters, 2000-2001 Tropical Terrestrial Ecology, in part (BL31D; 4 semester credits) 3 semesters, 2000-2002 *courses labeled "in part" were team taught TEACHING LOADS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST INDIES 2001-2002 �13 semester credits 2000-2001 �18 semester credits 1999-2000 �12 semester credits 1998-1999 �6 semester credits 1997-1998 �4 semester credits COURSES TAUGHT* AT CARIBBEAN UNION COLLEGE, MARACAS VALLEY, TRINIDAD Animal Behavior (ZOOL 484; 4 quarter / 3 semester credits) 8 quarters and 1 semester, 1993-1996, 1998-2002 Biogeography (BIOL 487; 5 quarter credits) 2 quarters, 1994, 1996 Biology Seminar (BIOL 448; 1 quarter / semester credit) 17 quarters and 2 semesters, 1994-2002 Environmental Science, in part (BIOL 204; 4 quarter credits) 1 quarter, 1998 General Ecology (BIOL 348; 4 quarter credits) 5 quarters, 1993-1996, 1998 Foundations of Biology II (BIOL 156; 5 quarter credits) 1 quarter, 1995 Foundations of Biology III (BIOL 157; 5 quarter credits) 3 quarters, 1994-1995, 1997 Natural History of Trinidad and Tobago (BIOL 245; 4 quarter credits) 2 quarters, 1996-1997 Ornithology (= Vertebrate Zoology, ZOOL 454; 4 quarter / 3 semester credits) 7 quarters and 1 semester, 1994-2002 Philosophical Biology (BIOL 389; 3 quarter credits) 2 quarters, 1995 Systematic Botany (BOT 474; 5 quarter credits) 5 quarters, 1994-1999 Topics in Marine Ecology, in part (BIOL 405; 4 quarter credits) 1 quarter, 1994 Topics in Marine Invertebrates (BIOL 405; 4 quarter credits) 5 quarters, 1994, 1996-1997, 1999, 2001 Topics in Tropical Ecology (BIOL 405; 4 quarter credits) 3 quarters, 1996-1997, 1999 *courses labeled "in part" were team taught TEACHING LOADS AT CARIBBEAN UNION COLLEGE 2001-2002 8 semester credits 2000-2001 14 quarter credits 1999-2000 10 quarter credits 1998-1999 23 quarter credits 1997-1998 14 quarter credits 1996-1997 45 quarter credits 1995-1996 39 quarter credits 1994-1995 32 quarter credits 1993-1994 37 quarter credits |
![]() |
| Undergraduate students (except for my wife, second from left, and son below) from Caribbean Union College taking Topics in Marine Invertebrates (BIOL 405; 4 quarter credits) and Topics in Tropical Ecology (BIOL 405; 4 quarter credits) while on an extended field trip in Tobago. Students are wearing T-shirts with a painting, donated by renown bird artist John P. O'Neill, of the White-tailed Sabrewing (Campylopterus ensipennis), a globally enangered species of hummingbird, used to raise funds for a conservation project of the White-tailed Sabrewing (for more information, click here). Kendal, Tobago, June 1996. |