Andrew Hayes

Andrew Hayes
Title:    
Instructor - Anthropology 
Department:    
Business, Behavioral & Social Science 
Office:    
Center for Advanced Technology 204 
Campus:    
MJC-East 
Phone:    
209-575-6552 
Email:    
 

Information


Hello, it's a pleasure to meet you. My name is Andrew Hayes, and I teach several courses in the Anthropology Department here at MJC. Anthropology is the study of human beings: our history, prehistory, and present cultural diversity [read more here]. We study everything that makes human beings unique as a species, and offer ourselves as mediators across lines of cultural misunderstanding, language confusion, and perceived divides between science, culture, religion, and politics. We are equally committed to scientific rigor in our methods, and empathetic understanding of the human condition in our publication and conversations. For this reason, we are part of both the School of Science and Mathematics and the School of Behavioral and Social Sciences. I am the faculty liason for the department in both of these Schools, and welcome you to get in touch with me if you have any questions about my discipline, our department, or where they might fit in to your personal plan of academic study and eventually to your career in human studies or services.

If you are interested in the physical sciences primarily, you may be interested in pursuing a career in Biological Anthropology or Archaeology, where you can study the human past and the current biological properties of the human race.

If you are more interested in the social sciences, you might consider a career in Cultural Anthropology or Linguistic Anthropology (my specialties!). This can be the first step in a career of public service or professional research into cultural life.

If any of these spark your interest, enroll in an introductory course! We teach intro classes on all four of our basic subfields, and you can take them in any order, with no prerequisites. Another fun way to get acquainted with the field is our popular Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion class, in which religious issues are covered from a broad systematic perspective that uses all four of anthropology's subfields to untangle this complex issue in a holistic way. Some other fun offerings are our specialty classes on Forensic Anthropology (that's how you start if you want to do CSI things like on "Bones") or Native Peoples of North America (a primer to the unique traditional cultures of the US, Canada, and Mexico, again using a broad set of information from archaeology, history, and ethnography). 

Publications

  • 2013 "Chapter 6: A Cultural History of the Colorado Plateau" in Geological and Cultural History of the Colorado Plateau, with Road Guides for Exploring Grand Canyon, Zion, and National Parks. G Hayes and A Haayes, eds. Modesto, CA: Publication of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists.
  • 2012 Gilbert, William Henry, A. Hayes, A. Calvert, K. Flammer, C. Ibarra, T. Lin, D. Lowen, M. Pevey, M. Thommpson, S. Vivelo, & B. Wheelis "Species Naming and Current Status of Orrrorin tugenensis"; "Species Naming and Current Status of Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba"; "Species Naming and Current Status of Sahelanthropus tchadensis"; "Species Naming and Current Status of Meganthropus africanus" ; "Species Naming and Current Status of Homo sapiens idaltu"; "Species Naming and Current Status of Homo gautengensis". Entries in the Human Fossil Record Database (http://fossilized.org)

Downloadable Files

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