Introducing the Life Sciences

Scott Freeman (University of Washington) and colleagues

Designed for majors, Introducing the Life Sciences provides a highly-structured framework in which students develop stronger study habits and metacognitive skills while meeting key learning objectives for content knowledge and skills development.

Introducing the Life Sciences replaces expensive textbooks and online homework systems. Its main goals are to help students learn how to study, learn to think like a scientist, and prepare themselves for upper-division courses and careers in the life sciences.

Themes and features

Students receive structured training in metacognition and study skills.

Instructors create high-structure courses (based on our frameworks) that match their teaching style and approach.

  • Instructors can customize every element of the learning platform, including learning objectives, assessment questions, Readiness Readings, and in-class activities.

  • Instructors can gauge students’ progress in our analytics dashboards to intervene with individual students or the class as a whole.

  • NEW! Spark student engagement with Codon’s in-class active-learning activities and polling technology, affectionately called TadPoll. Use our slides or blend them with yours. Our polling technology is a part of the platform and is provided at no additional cost.

978-1-964854-00-7, $48 per semester

978-1-964854-01-4, $40 per quarter

4-year access

See pricing policies

I have found Codon immensely helpful in providing students with opportunities for feedback and metacognition.
— Lisa McDonnell, University of California San Diego

meet The Course director

Scott Freeman is Lecturer Emeritus at the University of Washington. The recipient of a UW Distinguished Teaching Award, he has published research on how innovative approaches to teaching science benefit all students, but particularly students from disadvantaged backgrounds. He is the author of the textbooks Biological Science and Evolutionary Analysis, which have sold over 500,000 copies and been translated into multiple languages, and the popular book Saving Tarboo Creek, which is for general audiences.