EMGT2040- Haven't done it, never doing it. Know people who did it, probably fine, dunno lol.
EMGT2050- This course is fuckin mad! We got to go on a field trip, camping the weekend in the watagans and trap Australian native animals and go spotlighting for frogs and OMG best course. Pretty easy though. It kind of felt like it was geared towards tourists, which there are plenty of in the course. Fun though!
BIOL3350- Haven't done any third year courses.
Any BIOL 2000 level courses (2010, 2020, 2050, 2070, 2090, 2220)
BIOL2070 (ecology) is a first grade course, interesting, a fair bit of lab work, field excursions, but it's not overly hard, you'd smash it. I really like the lecturers, they're both excellent.
BIOL2002 (Cellular lab skills)- I did this for a few weeks, it's all lab based assessments. Every week there's a new lab and you've got to write up a full lab report and keep your log book up to date. A big, mandatory, structured workload and the labs themselves aren't easy.
This course was a major reason in motivating me to change from "living systems" major to "social systems" major. It was too much for my liking and I dropped out of the course.
Bio lab courses are annoying, because the cunt tutors are always heaps anal and on your back about every little thing. "you must flame sterilize that rod before re-applying it to the petri dish" yeah fuck off.
If you like a structured workload and working consistently throughout the course, and love lab work it might be okay. Also, the lecturer when I did it two years ago was some English (Irish maybe?) guy, and everyone thought he was a mean prick.
That's all I've done.
You were maths/phys before weren't you?
How does the change work? You have a minor in physics? I wanted to do a dip ed, but I read the rules for gaining accreditation as a teacher, and apparently you need to have at least a qualification in maths/phys/chem to become a science teacher. My experience in Bio/earth science is worth nothing