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High H1 Australian Wildlife Bio Notes ZOOL20004

I usually spend 2+ hours on my notes for each lecture. By using these notes I was able to get a high...

58 pages, 17964 words

Annelise

$30 per hour

Hey, I'm Annelise! I have a Bachelor of Arts with a double major in Philosophy and Politics/Internat...

Reviews

I did this subject as breadth (I'm a linguistics major) and absolutely loved it. Each week involved a few different guest lecturers discussing their research on a particular subgroup of Australian animals, and as such you cover a huge range of content. The three coordinators (Iliana, Raoul, and Clare) all research birds, so the largest segment of the course was spent looking at bird biology. The excursions were fantastic and great fun, as was doing the blog, although it was a lot of work. This subject was definitely not cruisy, but none of the content was particularly hard and a lot of the assessment involved going out in nature to look at wildlife, so it was very enjoyable despite the workload. The assessment consists of two scientific reports (after the midsem break) based on excursions, two worksheets completed during excursions, a midsemester test, a final exam, and the wildlife blog, which consisted of making 1-2 posts about wildlife you find each week. If you're looking at doing this subject as a breadth, you don't really need any science background knowledge besides some high school biology basics, although I found it a bit tricky having to write a scientific report because I hadn't ever done one before. Overall, I would highly recommend this subject!

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2022

I honestly found this subject pretty great. The lecturers (Iliana and Raoul) are really passionate about the subject, and the guest lecturers are equally good! However, this subject is no longer the 'wam booster' it used to be with the previous co-ordinator. The exam is totally application (interpreting data, hypothesis etc) and does not reflect the previous exams available online AT ALL. The average for the MST was around 65 and had to be scaled. 15% of your mark is also attributed to a blog which requires weekly posting of wildlife (pictures, videos, paragraphs explaining what you saw etc), which took A LOT OF TIME! They suggest spending at least 3-5 hours, however I easily spent 40+ hours trying to find good pictures suitable to post for it. Overall, this subject is great but requires a lot of time and to be able to get a H1 overall a lot of effort needs to be put in. That being said, it is totally doable with a lot of effort and work and the lecturers are truely fantastic.

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2021

Great subject with very engaging content. You can just feel the passion that the lecturers have for this subject. It's sad that Kath is no longer teaching in this subject but I was very lucky to have her before she retire. I cannot guarantee the subject is a 5/5 without her but it is still great nonetheless. Content is great if you love animals at all and you get to go on a different field trip every week.

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2018

Awesome subject! Lots of fun field trips and interesting lectures. Not too challenging, exam was pretty relaxed. They even brought in live bats for one of the lectures! My favourite subject ever! Keep in mind though, its coordinator Kath is retiring at the end of the year, and it definitely won't be the same without her (she's the best)

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2018

Very fun and relaxing subject to take without too much stress

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2014

Great, interesting subject with great lecturers! Pracs are fun and involve a trip to Melb Zoo.

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2014