Does the study design seem slightly vague in terms of what is expected of us to know, or is that just me?
The new study design isn't nearly as vague as the old one. You'll understand if you see the table summarising the changes made.
To be honest, there's a lot in VCE Biology that's incredibly vague - I'm talking about most extended response questions, actually. For most of the year I really had no idea where I was sitting and I still had no idea after the exam (one user here may recall a PM where I predicted I'd get 36-40 in Biology XD). You're going to see a lot of practice questions over the course of the year and go "What the hell is this asking?" or "What exactly does it want me to say?". My advice is to get as much exposure to past questions as you possibly can so that you start to develop some awareness for what the assessor is looking for. It does get a little bit better over time but it takes a lot of getting used to.
As someone who didn't do Units 1 & 2 either, I also found studying the subject in general a bit vague at times - I didn't exactly know what was necessary and what wasn't and didn't know which information to pick out from all the resources. Eventually I did find a methodical way to study through it all and this is the only thing I can put my 50 down to.
I'm contemplating on purchasing A+ Notes, but is it necessary if one already has the TSFX notes?
Briefly going through the A+ notes, they seem very concise. And as MM1 has brought up, the TSFX notes seem unnecessarily comprehensive?
I got so overwhelmed with all this information that I pretty much neglected all my other resources (
Biozone and
Biol Notes) and sourced nearly all of my content from
Nature of Biology. However, my school booklist required me to purchase
StudyOn, which is just an online resource that organises all the past VCAA questions by topic. This was how I revised all year and I think it was a massive help. You'll eventually see that each company has a slightly different style and approach in their questions so practicing only on VCAA questions was probably quite beneficial since I got a glimpse into what the assessors are actually looking for.