can someone give me some guidelines?
I don’t want to waste time learning chemistry in uber-detail. Just enough to start learning about organic chemistry and understand it.

can someone give me some guidelines?
I don’t want to waste time learning chemistry in uber-detail. Just enough to start learning about organic chemistry and understand it.
What jobs are there for a person with a economics biology degree and a biology minor?
Ok, so I want an awesome chemistry experiment that I can do from normal things you can find in the kitchen. Were not talking about little child stuff. I want to get a highly reactive substance that will flame or do something cool while placed in water. I heard you can melt table salt and run an electrical current through it and get Na metal. How do I do that?
I’m gonna be taking physics next year in high school, but i haven’t taken precalculus yet. I’ve heard that you should know certain things from precalculus to do well in physics. What should I know? Can you please provide links to websites or names of books.
Also where can i find a free online physics course or a free physics textbook online?
I am a freshman in a four year university, and I was planning on taking a summer Chemistry course. However, I have heard that med schools do not like to see students taking summer courses (especially science classes). Is this true, and how much would it affect my chances of being accepted into a medical school?
I am starting to look around right now….
B.S. in biology with a concentration molecular biology
Vo-Tech training in electronics repair
Computer Programming I and II using Java (CS courses)
Calculus I through IV
My GPA will suck, though…around 2.6 because I failed out of my first try at college like twelve years ago and the transcript is always there.
I have 8 years experience fixing computers.
I’m very interested in chemistry. I’m a sophomore in high school. I was wondering what the difference is between organic chemistry, analytical chemistry, biochemistry, etc. And also, what would I have to do to get a job as a pharmacist? Or something which would be creating new drugs or finding new chemicals?
I’m planning on majoring in philosophy, but I have a crap load of credits left so I’m thinking about double majoring in philosophy and physics.
I have taken physics honors in high school, and got a 5 on AP physics. I liked it a lot, but never really planned on doing anything with it much more than those two classes.
I wouldn’t mind doing this double major so, what would be the benefits of majoring in physics?
I got an A in General Chemistry I and II, but I don’t think we had a good teacher. I don’t think we learned everything we should have learned. We learned about balancing equations and did a bunch of calculations. We didn’t learn about the Louis structures at all. How important is it to have a good background in General Chemistry to do well in Organic Chemistry? I’m a biology major (junior year) and I really need to do well in Organic.
I will have an MS in biology and I am considering teaching. What credentials do I need to teach high school biology? Are Biology teachers in short supply? Will the MS in biology plus whatever credentials I need give me a competitive edge in the job market?