Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Advanced Higher Investigation, Help! :)
2 Answers
Does any1 have any ideas for adv. higher bio investigations?? im totally clueless, i want to do something that will be interesting to carry out, like sleep deprivation or something:) but i have no idea how to go about doing it, or how to do the write up,
If anyone has any ideas, or has done investigations before, help wud be greatly apreciated :D
Thnx
If anyone has any ideas, or has done investigations before, help wud be greatly apreciated :D
Thnx
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I despair when I'm asked questions like this as it shows the flaws in the teaching of biology in Scottish schools and FE colleges.
Your teachers/lecturers should have sat you down and given you some guidance on how to choose a topic for the investigation that is of interest to you. It's part of the responsibility of the teacher/lecturer to discourage students from being over-ambitious.
I really think that selecting sleep-deprivation as a topic is fraught with difficulties and I wouldn't recommend it. You would have to organise at least one control group and have a good, basic knowledge of statistics to interpret the data properly. Adhering to the investigation methods you'd decided upon would also be problematical. Most importantly there is a risk of harm involved. Sleep deprivation studies in the UK have to be licensed by the government and carried out in specially equipped facilities.
I know I haven't really answered your question but I think you need to sit down and think about biology topics that interest you. Start at the top by deciding whether botany, zoology or microbiology interest you most and work from there. Alternatively, you may have a greater interest in such things as biochemistry or ecology.
I'd suggest you run your ideas past your teachers or lecturers during term time to see what they suggest, but it may not be essential. When you have a better idea of the topic you'd like to investigate, post here again and I'll see if I can help.
Your teachers/lecturers should have sat you down and given you some guidance on how to choose a topic for the investigation that is of interest to you. It's part of the responsibility of the teacher/lecturer to discourage students from being over-ambitious.
I really think that selecting sleep-deprivation as a topic is fraught with difficulties and I wouldn't recommend it. You would have to organise at least one control group and have a good, basic knowledge of statistics to interpret the data properly. Adhering to the investigation methods you'd decided upon would also be problematical. Most importantly there is a risk of harm involved. Sleep deprivation studies in the UK have to be licensed by the government and carried out in specially equipped facilities.
I know I haven't really answered your question but I think you need to sit down and think about biology topics that interest you. Start at the top by deciding whether botany, zoology or microbiology interest you most and work from there. Alternatively, you may have a greater interest in such things as biochemistry or ecology.
I'd suggest you run your ideas past your teachers or lecturers during term time to see what they suggest, but it may not be essential. When you have a better idea of the topic you'd like to investigate, post here again and I'll see if I can help.
It's just a thought, but you might like to look into the impact of biological topics on industry in your area.
I once approved a DPhil study on an aspect of yeast biochemistry by a student who had originally studied the presence of Lactobacillus frigidus in brewery Saccharomyces cerevisiae cultures for her AHI. Although her research was helped by the many published scientific papers on this subject, the real reason she was able to undertake the study was because her father was the brewery manager and the family lived about 200 yards away!
I once approved a DPhil study on an aspect of yeast biochemistry by a student who had originally studied the presence of Lactobacillus frigidus in brewery Saccharomyces cerevisiae cultures for her AHI. Although her research was helped by the many published scientific papers on this subject, the real reason she was able to undertake the study was because her father was the brewery manager and the family lived about 200 yards away!