This professor, known for their fascination with geckos, teaches a first-year fall course that requires students to give an in-class presentation
Professor Luke Mahler
This Building is also used for Graduation Ceremonies
Convocation Hall
Usually taken in the fall, this course has its labs in Lash Miller Laboratories
CHM135
This lobe at the back of your brain is responsible for vision
The Occipital lobe
This scientist is known as the father of evolution
Charles Darwin
This well-liked professor is so popular that students happily fill up their 6–9 p.m. classes to learn from them
Professor Kenneth "The GOAT" Yip
This UofT building hosts a lab where students watch a flying pig in action!
McLennan Physical Laboratories
This first year winter course involves a lot of hexagons
CHM136
This part of the brain helps you balance, coordinate movement, and walk in a straight line after pulling an all-nighter.
The Cerebellum
In calculus, this rule allows you to differentiate a product of two functions
Attached to the Clara Benson Building, this spot is where UofT students often go to break a sweat
Athletic Center
This second year course recently had a midterm where only 192/1300 students achieved 80% or higher
HMB265
This is the brief change in electrical charge that travels along a neuron’s axon
Action Potential
The change in velocity over time is referred to as this
Acceleration
These finger-like projections receive signals from other neurons
Dendrites
In population genetics, this term describes random changes in allele frequency due to chance
Genetic Drift
These cells don’t send signals but support, protect, and feed the neurons that do
Glial Cells
During oxidative phosphorylation, the proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane drives ATP synthesis via this enzyme complex
ATP Synthase