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Author Topic: Studying Biology  (Read 3807 times)  Share 

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Stick

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Studying Biology
« on: November 30, 2012, 07:06:07 pm »
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So I've just completed my headstart week, which has included five lessons of Biology. I already know that I'm very glad I made the decision to swap from Physics to Biology, but I have a few questions in regards to the content and structure of the course:

1. I'm getting the impression from my teacher that I cannot solely rely on one source for this subject (I've been encouraged to use Nature of Biology, Biozone and Biol Notes simultaneously, to give you an example). Is this really necessary?

2. Is it just me, or does the Nature of Biology textbook have a lot of irrelevant information? Also, I've found that the three sources mentioned above seem to cover different things within each sub-topic. How much detail do I really need to delve into?

Thanks. :)
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HighLatency

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #1 on: November 30, 2012, 07:11:43 pm »
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Would try to do the entirety of biozone, it's gold.
Biol notes is really just there if you are struggling with the basic concepts, it does not go in depth.
And yes Nature of Biology has a lot of redunancy.

TBH if I ever got stuck on or didn't know the definition of something I just googled it instead of trying to find it in the textbook hehe.

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #2 on: November 30, 2012, 07:12:58 pm »
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So I've just completed my headstart week, which has included five lessons of Biology. I already know that I'm very glad I made the decision to swap from Physics to Biology, but I have a few questions in regards to the content and structure of the course:

1. I'm getting the impression from my teacher that I cannot solely rely on one source for this subject (I've been encouraged to use Nature of Biology, Biozone and Biol Notes simultaneously, to give you an example). Is this really necessary?

2. Is it just me, or does the Nature of Biology textbook have a lot of irrelevant information? Also, I've found that the three sources mentioned above seem to cover different things within each sub-topic. How much detail do I really need to delve into?

Thanks. :)
1. Nature of biology has pretty much everything you need to know. I'd still recommend listening to douchy's biology podcast and use biol notes. Biol notes i HIGHLY RECOMMEND it has simple notes that pretty much allow you to understand anything in the course.
2. Nature of biology does have a lot of stories and extra information but they put it there to make it more "interesting." Personally i just skipped over them and got the info i needed. use biol notes along with study design to know what information to focus on.
BTW for immunity i highly recommend Khanacademy.
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pi

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #3 on: November 30, 2012, 07:21:54 pm »
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Campbell's Biology 9th.

peterpan101

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #4 on: November 30, 2012, 07:22:25 pm »
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Would try to do the entirety of biozone, it's gold.
Biol notes is really just there if you are struggling with the basic concepts, it does not go in depth.
And yes Nature of Biology has a lot of redunancy.

TBH if I ever got stuck on or didn't know the definition of something I just googled it instead of trying to find it in the textbook hehe.

is everthing in biozone relevant ?

pi

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #5 on: November 30, 2012, 07:24:43 pm »
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Biozone is great imo. Some of the pages may seem irrelevant (make sure you check the contents page to see which pages are for VCE), but that's usually because they are case studies of sorts :) Good questions.

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #6 on: November 30, 2012, 07:31:58 pm »
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is heinemann a good text book because that is the one we have to buy for school, is it worth having a look at another text book?

pi

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #7 on: November 30, 2012, 08:57:22 pm »
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Nature of biology is the best.

Stick

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #8 on: November 30, 2012, 09:40:33 pm »
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I find it a bit difficult at this stage to gauge how much detail I need to go into. For example, would I need to know the exact differences in the structures of a-glucose and b-glucose, or is it enough to just know that multiple isomers exist?
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pi

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #9 on: November 30, 2012, 10:22:11 pm »
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I find it a bit difficult at this stage to gauge how much detail I need to go into. For example, would I need to know the exact differences in the structures of a-glucose and b-glucose, or is it enough to just know that multiple isomers exist?

You won't be expected to know the structures off by heart or anything.

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #10 on: November 30, 2012, 11:35:26 pm »
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You won't even be expected to know that isomers exist

Stick

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #11 on: November 30, 2012, 11:56:27 pm »
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OK, I've been reading too much into the biochemistry of it all (ie I needlessly learnt that two a-glucose monomers forms maltose, but two b-glucose monomers forms cellobiose). Whoops! :P
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pi

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #12 on: December 01, 2012, 12:22:00 am »
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Maltose - ok. But cellobiose? LOL WHY?

(I can honestly not remember ever hearing cellobiose except this one time I did a random biochem-based wkipidia session...)

Stick

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #13 on: December 01, 2012, 10:00:02 am »
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So it would not be enough to say that just two glucose molecules form together as maltose?

Also, I covered glycosidic bonds. I'm assuming that I went too far again? :P
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Russ

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Re: Studying Biology
« Reply #14 on: December 01, 2012, 10:02:04 am »
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What textbook are you reading? Do biology, not chemistry.