Veterinary Pharmacology

This course covers the basic principles of pharmacology, including general drug types, dosage forms, drug administration, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics. Drug packaging, labeling, and dispensing are covered, as are record keeping for pharmacologic agents. The legal and ethical factors involved in handling pharmaceuticals are considered. Prescription notation and review of drug calculations are also included.

Veterinary Pharmacology

This course covers the basic principles of pharmacology, including general drug types, dosage forms, drug administration, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics. Drug packaging, labeling, and dispensing are covered, as are record keeping for pharmacologic agents. The legal and ethical factors involved in handling pharmaceuticals are considered. Prescription notation and review of drug calculations are also included.

Veterinary Pharmacology

This course covers the basic principles of pharmacology, including general drug types, dosage forms, drug administration, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics. Drug packaging, labeling, and dispensing are covered, as are record keeping for pharmacologic agents. The legal and ethical factors involved in handling pharmaceuticals are considered. Prescription notation and review of drug calculations are also included.

Media and Society

Media constantly surrounds us. So how does reading, watching, posting, scrolling—and then scrolling some more—influence what we think, act, and become? This course explores how traditional, digital, and social media shape individuals, groups, and societies. We will ask questions like: How did a word coined by Kai Cenat and his friends become Oxford’s word of the year? How do music streaming platforms influence what becomes a hit song? How do photographs in the news, ads on TikTok, paintings in museums, and dusty old books influence how we think about society and ourselves?

Sociology Everyday Life

Why do we have seven days in a week—not six or eight? Why are women’s pants pockets so much smaller than men’s? Why are everyday items like beds, eating utensils, and coffee pots so different around the world? This course is an introduction to sociology through the familiar, functional, fun, and weird things in our lives—things like calendars, clothes, games, and awkward encounters.

Amaya McLeod

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Research Fellow
Institution:  
UMASS Amherst
Department:  
Civil & Environmental Engineering
Email Address:  
acmcleod@umass.edu
Office Building:  
Marston Hall

Ben River Leinfelder

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Lecturer
Institution:  
UMASS Amherst
Department:  
Environmental Conservation
Email Address:  
bleinfelder@umass.edu
Office Building:  
Holdsworth Hall

James Kirk

Submitted by admin on
Primary Title:  
Visiting Assistant Professor
Institution:  
Smith College
Department:  
Government
Email Address:  
jkirk@smith.edu
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