I have a hunch that for a Bio1 textbook, you're going to be ...

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I have a hunch that for a Bio1 textbook, you're going to be thrown the major theories but to be it's all going to be framed as if they're all static objects with a certain level of depth. It fits for a Bio1 class, But the practicality of it and the level of detail that I think you're looking for might lie somewhere else.
Maybe something like organic chemistry meets biochem meets genetics (3 separate classes to get where you're interested in lesrning). And you don't really need a background in bio to learn chemistry and you don't need a background in chemistry to learn organic chemistry. It helps, but they're not really sequential, and each class would bring you up to speed on most of the necessary theories in the first few weeks of class.
I haven't even taken bio 1, but then again, i think I took a w3!Rd path to my current understanding anyway 😅🤷
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"content": "I have a hunch that for a Bio1 textbook, you're going to be thrown the major theories but to be it's all going to be framed as if they're all static objects with a certain level of depth. It fits for a Bio1 class, But the practicality of it and the level of detail that I think you're looking for might lie somewhere else. \n\nMaybe something like organic chemistry meets biochem meets genetics (3 separate classes to get where you're interested in lesrning). And you don't really need a background in bio to learn chemistry and you don't need a background in chemistry to learn organic chemistry. It helps, but they're not really sequential, and each class would bring you up to speed on most of the necessary theories in the first few weeks of class. \n\nI haven't even taken bio 1, but then again, i think I took a w3!Rd path to my current understanding anyway 😅🤷",
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