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- New Parts for Old exhibition
- Deathstyles of the Rich & Famous exhibition
Biology Teachers Professional Development Day 2008
Exploring Further Frontiers in Senior Biology
The 2008 Teachers Professional Development Program for senior Biology teachers was held on Friday 4th July 2008. Over 110 teachers participated in the program on the day and some had travelled from rural NSW or interstate to be here!
The program included of a wide range of lectures and workshops on some of the key areas of the Biology syllabus like Archaea, Prions, Animal Biotechnology, Neuroanatomy, Human Evolution, Stem Cells and many other areas.
To view the 2008 Teacher Professional Development Day Program description & Registration form click here.
"Gutsy Stuff" Exhibition
The newly relocated Museum of Human Disease has embarked on yet another special exhibition to coincide with its launch. Following in the footsteps of "Deathstyles of the Rich and Famous", "New Parts for Old" and "Getting on My Nerves", we now have "Gutsy Stuff". This exhibition explores a number of questions many may have harboured about the ills and spills of our digestive system. A guts and all expose of bellyaches, blockages, food, fibre and flatulence, strangulated hernias, motions and potions from gullet to guts, are all on the agenda in this exhibition. This exhibition provides education about the unspeakables!
Find out why Rudolf Valentino (1895 - 1926), star of the silent film era, would not have died from his affliction today.
Looking at the gamut of conditions ranging from appendicitis, gallstones, bowel tumours, irritable bowel syndrome, intestinal worms, infections such as typhoid and cholera, ulcers, pancreatitis, diverticultis, Crohn’s Disease and coeliac disease through to conditions like bulemia, anorexia and obesity, this exhibition will have something of interest for everyone.