JellyFish72 wrote:
*is nostalgic* I remember Froguts back when the frog dissection was totally free - the real one, not the demo... And when it was unknown... The good old days...
Back on topic, I somewhat forced my school to buy the Froguts dissection program for me. I refused to dissect pigs and froggies... they're too cute! It makes me sad... So I sat and knitted instead.
I remember we used Froguts (back when it was free) to practice before we did the real thing.
Whatever your feelings are on dissection, there are some things you just can't learn by looking at a picture. Dissection gives you that rare firsthand experience that is missing in the modern science classroom.
In 9th grade, we dissected a frog to practice before dissecting a rat. The weird thing about the rat was that the formaldehyde had turned its fur yellow. The entire hallway smelled sickly sweet and you couldn't walk through there without getting a headache. We wore surgical masks while we did it. Still, I'll never forget the experience. We even had contests to see whose rat had the longest intestines and stuff. It was really cool. For the most part, rats are extremely similar to humans. Dissection is an excellent way to learn about the human body as well.
I love how that entire paragraph was about 10 short, declarative sentences. I'm too tired to write well XD