<p>What in the world is a “full wet lab”?</p>
<p>I don’t know, but it sounds erotic</p>
<p>heres why i asked:</p>
<p>Bethany:</p>
<p>A three year biology degree is not a realistic possibility in any shape
or form. I know of no one that has successfully done this. In part the
reason is that the various labs such as chemistry, physics and biology meet
for a longer time than the credit hours given for the course. These courses
are intensive hard science courses with full wet labs (unlike what one
would normally expect from a regular lecture course) and the maximum hours
one can take is 19 hours. However, it may be possible to take a full load of
coursework each summer. But even with those additional hours one, even
the brightest student(s) would be lucky to graduate in three and one half
years.</p>
<p>We have a biology education professor on staff, and her name is Dr.
Jones. She can let you know what you need to do to complete your high school teacher education certificate in biology. By the way science education graduates are in demand.</p>
<p>Wet labs are full, very in-depth labs. The term “wet lab” actually refers to a lab where chemicals/compounds/drugs/biological matters/materials are used and tested, and thus a full lab set up involving water access, ventilation, piping systems, and other non-everyday equipment is used. They’re usually more than just one credit, or are associated with a 4-credit course. Bio and chem majors use them a ton, and research is generally the main aspect of the lab.</p>
<p>“Regular” labs are the typical plastic-safety-goggles-and-a-notebook labs. These types of labs are used to reinforce what you learn in a lecture, and involve minor experiments and lots of reading.</p>