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Create a visual study guide/infographic for the the first unit: Biology, Evoluti

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Create a visual study guide/infographic for the the first unit: Biology, Evolution, and Variation (Lectures 1-6 + Labs 1-2).The main goal of the visual study guide is for you to demonstrate the most important topics covered in the course through your own point of view. I want to see how you reinterpret and connect the ideas discussed in the course in a bigger picture. Think of it as a tool for yourself, or a product that would let you explain to anyone who is not in the class what are the most important take-aways from this module.Your Visual Study Guide can be done in several formats: a mindmap (https://www.mindmapping.com/), an infographic (https://piktochart.com/formats/infographics/), a drawing/painting, or even an animation. The important thing is that you demonstrate how the main topics in the course connect to specific subtopics, which in turn are related to ideas or facts.If you want to see some cool examples of how to build a nice and effective mind map, check this out: https://www.mindmeister.com/blog/mind-map-examples/The Visual Study Guide should include at least the following information:3-5 main topics discussed in the lectures or labs.How the main topics relate to their subtopics, and what are the related ideas or facts in each subtopic (again, see the link above for good examples).If possible, demonstrate how the main topics are connected as well.Include 1-3 important things to know about each main topic.Make connections about how these main topics help us understand human evolutionary history and diversity.Include at least 1 exciting fact per main topic: highlight a super cool/awesome/exciting fact that called your attention during the lectures and labs.Whenever relevant, include images and maps to support your related ideas or facts. (You can draw your own images or use one from the internet/lectures).Finally, be creative! This is your opportunity to learn this content from your own point of view, so create the visual study guide that fits your own learning style and interests!I am looking forward to seeing what you all create!Non anthropology examples:Here is an example of a mind map for strategies on whole food plant based living.Center point is “strategies for whole-food plant-based living,” branches into “mindset” “surviving social events” “shopping” “well-stocked” “chopping” “Before you start cooking” and “don’t go hungry.” each of these sub topics breaks into 2-4 sub topics.

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