Used it in my first year of my last degree....pretty simplistic stuff...
No use whatsoever for understanding the complex things, personally I'd say it was a better idea to use wikipedia for the simple stuff and get a book that's a little more specialised in what you're interested in. It's got a lot of population wide animal biology and plants that'll be next to worthless in a practical sense (although worth knowing for its own sake).
It's not cheap either...
Last edited by Arch_Angel; 08-04-2009 at 05:42 AM.
I'm reading it for higher biology not for medicine, so probably in the wrong forum (should be in candidate books rather than current medical students' books). I didn't have the chance to study biology at school (restricted to 2 sciences and forced to do a social 'science' which was gobshite to me) so it's all pretty new to me and I think it is a pretty goood introduction to biology. I like that the chapters are short and therefore break down the learning into manageable chunks.
Texts for Higher Chemistry, Biology and Human Biology seem pretty thin on the ground. Haven't even seen AP&H texts - is there still a Higher AP&H? Stupid jock separarist education system, what the hell is wrong with the whole of the United Kingdom not doing the same exams, bah!
Do you think you can pick up a lot of the more basic introduction learning such as animal biology and plants through blogs? I'm trying to keep my costs down and don't want to build a collection of books that will be read once only!
I can't believe the last day of interviews is tomorrow and I wasn't invited for interview nor rejected I feel really gutted dont know what they did to my application =( !!!!!
By the looks of it, Imperial have started sending out responses...I know there are people out there with rejections, but hopefully there'll be some offers too? If so, keep your fingers crossed!
Hi RobynLW
Can I just ask, are you a mature student or have you just finished taking your GCSEs? because if you have just finished your GCSEs and are about to take your a levels, then for medicine...
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