Teaching Your Inner Fish


Next Fall, I’ll be back in the classroom teaching introductory biology again. One thing I’m planning to do is to use Shubin’s Your Inner Fish for that course…and just look what the good man has done just for me: all the figures from the book have been released as powerpoint slides.

OK, he probably didn’t think about me at all, and he’s releasing them for everyone to use, but still…it’s awfully serendipitous.

i-40694a8614684ac9e30b06ff27ba00f5-armbones.jpeg

Grab ’em all, teachers! These are tools for getting more evolution into the biology classroom!

Comments

  1. Moggie says

    It’s a great book, and even the news that Shubin uses Powerpoint can’t diminish my admiration of the man… much.

  2. Archaeopteryx says

    That’s awesome, but where were these figures this semester when I was teaching Comparative Anatomy? Anyway, Shubin’s book has made me a better teacher.

  3. B166ER says

    Those are really cool slides. We need more young people being exposed to side by side examples of the kinds of changes that have happened over the many many years that life has been evolving on our little backwater planet. I wish I was in your class, P.Z., and not here in Everett WA. Living in a town that at one time(?) shot and lynched Wobblies fills me with shame and fear.

    No Gods, No Masters
    Cameron

  4. ChrisH says

    Re-reading it currently on my commute. Great book (as a non-biologist) that’s well illustrated too. :-)

  5. David23 says

    Fantastic book, just finished The Greatest Show on Earth. I wonder which book I will get tomorrow on my birthday?

  6. Joffan says

    Releasing the inner creationist:

    Look! MEYERS is saying that men came from dogs now! and advocating bestiality! Think of the children!! This man is pure EVIL!!!!

  7. DavidCT says

    Thanks for the heads up. Now where was the corcoduck? Sorry, with so many transitions think of all the new gaps. It is hard to keep up organizing the gaps so that they make sense.

  8. magista says

    Thanks for this. I’ve forwarded it to all our biology teachers. Here’s hoping it makes its appearance next semester.

  9. MrFire says

    I still love the notion that my, say, 109-greats-grandparent was a single-celled microorganism, and that some of my distant, distant cousins still are.

  10. dpattersonmonroe says

    Thanks so much!! As a homeschooling parent teaching evolution, I’m always looking for cool resources to explain science to my kids. My 9 year old daughter took one look at the arm bones slide and pronounced it awesome, which of course is the response we want :-) Thanks!

  11. Jackal says

    Excellent! I leaned as much about biology from books like You’re Inner Fish and Microcosm (highly recommended) as I did in my General Biology I and II courses this year.

  12. mikecbraun says

    Hey! I’m reading that book at this vey moment. Well, not this very moment…I’m typing at this very moment. But I will be reading it…..now!

  13. Kevin says

    Wish I had a good biology teacher from my high school years – at the polar opposite to dpattersonmonroe, my family was Christian, so the theory of evolution was the big ‘E’ word. We didn’t get a textbook, but we looked online and my mother approved of Christian-based ones, but disapproved evolution ones.

    And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why I failed human anatomy and have never held an interest in biology until recently, when it became encouraged by reading and studying about evolutionary theory – which I still only sort of understand.

  14. Zeno says

    MrFire: I still love the notion that my, say, 109-greats-grandparent was a single-celled microorganism, and that some of my distant, distant cousins still are.

    You lucky dog. If only all of my single-celled cousins were nice and distant I wouldn’t have to deal with them at Xmas.

  15. Ronin says

    Total layman here, but I thought bony fish evolved after our ancestors left the ocean. Am I off-base?

  16. Sven DiMilo says

    Ronin: yes, you are. As a group, osteichthyans (bony fish) were around for at least a hundred million years before some of them became tetrapods.

  17. https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id?id=AItOawlw4oH0l6k2YD0NCQUeu7nC2owgujUl77U says

    Hmph. We’re still fish…

    I’d like to add my five stars to collective kudos for The Inner Fish. This non-scientist found it readable and educational.

    No Creationist could read it, however; it would break their Jesus filters.

  18. Rachel Bronwyn says

    What a fantastic resource. Now, when will someone do one on cetacean evolution? I’d hate to have to do the work myself.

  19. bastardsheep.com says

    I’m surprised you didn’t say “get biology back in to the biology classroom … especially in Texas”.

  20. David Marjanović says

    Warning: Ichthyostega (third from the top) was not capable of putting the soles of its feet on the ground. (The palms of its hands, yes, but not the soles of its feet.) It wasn’t able to twist its legs like that. It wasn’t able to stand or walk; if it ever came to land, it moved the way seals do.

  21. MaxH says

    Oh, I snapped those up something fierce.

    I mean, I teach history, but you never know. I’ll offer copies up to any faculty member that wants them, for sure.

  22. Everyday Atheist says

    Sweet. May have to print these and “accidentally” leave them lying around in the room my Catholic mother-in-law is staying in.

  23. truthspeaker says

    Posted by: Everyday Atheist | December 23, 2009 3:35 PM

    Sweet. May have to print these and “accidentally” leave them lying around in the room my Catholic mother-in-law is staying in.

    Why would a Catholic have a problem with it.

  24. amphiox says

    re: #21

    The simplified answer to your question is that there are two main groups of bony fish, the “ray-finned” fish, and the “lobe-finned” fish. All land vertebrates (tetrapods) are descended from the lobe fins, and the only surviving lobe-fins that are still “fish” are the lungfish and the coelacanths (though cladistically, all the tetrapods are still fish).

    The ray-fins went on to take over the seas, and branched into several families. The vast majority of modern “bony” fish descend from one of those families, whose first appearance was after the tetrapod colonization of land.

  25. https://me.yahoo.com/a/3FrrNShoyftlirW._2Or7IFbr4z7e7hs.Wss#1287c says

    Merry Christmas!

    “Ship and boat diverged; the cold, damp night breeze blew between; a screaming gull flew overhead; the two hulls wildly rolled; we gave three heavy-hearted cheers, and blindly plunged like fate into the lone Atlantic.”

  26. Moggie says

    #16:

    I leaned as much about biology from books like You’re Inner Fish

    Ahem. You’re In A Fish.

  27. Rutee, Shrieking Harpy of Dooooom says

    “Why would a Catholic have a problem with it.”

    well, if she disagrees with the orthodox ruling that, well, Science is right about the origin of life and all that fun stuff, then she’d have a problem with it.

  28. Moggie says

    Hey, Your Inner Fish is available in a Kindle edition! I’ve just gladly put more money into Prof. Shubin’s pocket.

    If there’s anyone reading this who hasn’t yet picked up the book: please do so. It’s not just a fascinating look at our evolutionary history, it’s also infused with the pleasure of finding things out. After reading it, you’ll want to hug Neil Shubin.

  29. Rob Clack says

    Neil’s book is terrific and I hate to make a negative remark, but the slide showing Eusthenopteron, Tiktaalik, Ichthyostega, etc, is wrong. The manus of Ichthyostega is unknown, so the reconstructed bones are in his imagination. Humerus, radius and ulna are known, but that’s all.

    Of course, Jenny knows this stuff better than I do. For the latest, you could email her. [email protected].

  30. Multicellular says

    Awesome! Thanks so much for the link. I’ll be teaching an intro to biology 2 class next semester, starting off with evolution, as well and these slides will be great!

  31. Vercetti says

    I’m a community college instructor in east texas (don’t laugh at me). I made my zoology class read this book for a massive amount of points. Most students actually enjoyed it and a few began to see evolution and natural selection for the elegant process that it is. I did have one IDiot that needs to do more reading, i sent him in the direction of The Greatest Show on Earth. I’m adding both books to the optional extra credit book list for my non-science majors classes.

  32. Owlmirror says

    but the slide showing Eusthenopteron, Tiktaalik, Ichthyostega, etc, is wrong. The manus of Ichthyostega is unknown, so the reconstructed bones are in his imagination.

    Actually, the manus in the figure looks greyer than the rest of the image, which I’m pretty sure is intended to indicate that it’s speculative, not based on anything actually found.

    I think he just wanted to emphasize that there was something there, even if it’s a guess as to what it looked like.

    Of course, Jenny knows this stuff better than I do. For the latest, you could email her.

    I was just reading through her review paper —

    Clack, J. A. 2009. The Fish–Tetrapod Transition: New Fossils and Interpretations. Evolution Education and Outreach, 2:213–223. doi 10.1007/s12052-009-0119-2

    It might be nice if PDFs of her older papers were also available online for open-access download. Just a thought.