I'm currently doing psychology, philosophy and geology. All very interesting and enlightening courses.
Geology is a lot more useful than I thought it would be, so I recommend taking it as an elective just for the hell of it, you might like it a lot.
I took one semester of Astronomy and blitzed it. Real eye opener. You'll not only learn lots of interesting facts about the universe, but you'll learn HOW we figured them out.
Chemistry was a bitch. I did well in Chemistry in year 12, but first year Chem was very very hard. It's primarily focused on electron shells of atoms and is very involved. Tread lightly.
Biology was interesting at times and highly tedious at others. I do a lot of extra reading on biology and evolution in my spare time, so I ended up dropping out of biology due to a lack of new material (boredom).
Statistics is boring as hell, but necessary for some fields. If your background in maths sucks, you might consider doing this course simply to learn it a little better. Even though I almost failed it, I've gained a greater understanding of stats just having done it at all.
Only take history if your idea of fun is reading long, drawn out essays on historical figures, then writing your own essays from their bland material. As you can tell, I didn't enjoy it.
Number one piece of advice I can give you: learn referencing systems (APA or Harvard or Oxford, whichever your lecturer prefers) for doing your essays and research reports. You will be doing a LOT of them, in almost all subjects. They are difficult and tedious, but you won't get through uni without writing them. Accept that now before it bites you in the ass later
RE: Teaching. Get a degree and get into a field first. Do at least 10 years of research or work in your field then go back and do a post grad in education. You'll be able to start in teaching at a higher pay grade due to your extra experience.




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