Marine Biology, taught at the bench.
Eight units from the ocean environment to humans and the ocean — lab-led, mastery-based, and built to AP-level rigor. A student doesn't pass this course by recognizing the right answer. They pass it by demonstrating, in person, that they actually understand it — specimen in hand.
A full year of marine biology, built around what happens in the lab.
Most marine biology courses are a textbook full of diagrams with a few demonstrations bolted on. This one is the reverse. Every week is built around a question you answer at the bench or the shore — under a microscope, over a specimen tray, with a plankton net or a refractometer — and the reading exists to support that work. That is what "lab-led, not textbook-led" means, and it is the single most important thing to understand about how this course runs.
The course is organized as a two-day rhythm: a Concept Day where the idea is introduced and worked through on paper, and an Experiment Day where it becomes physical — observed, measured, dissected, keyed out — and gets written into a real lab notebook. Between the two days, the student works at home, and that gap is where retention actually consolidates.
Mastery is the progression rule. A student advances through a concept when they can reproduce, explain, and apply it — not when the calendar says so. "Not yet" is the honest, expected default; "mastered" is earned and demonstrated. The rubrics are the instrument that makes that judgment fair and repeatable.
Eight units, in the order they build.
The spine runs from the physical ocean — zones, salinity, currents, pressure — up through the life it holds and out to the people who depend on it. Each unit has its own mastery rubric; the full sequence, with the labs and the two-day rhythm, is on the course map.
A year at the bench, not behind a screen.
Three doors into the pack.
The course map
The full eight-unit sequence, the labs, and how the two-day rhythm plays out across a school year.
The resources
Every artifact you need to run the course: rubrics, study system, pre-lab checklist, AI-use guide, and more.
The lab notes
Six short essays on why marine biology is taught this way — the thinking behind the method, in plain language.