GCSE Biology - Reproduction by xtreme papers - classnotes.gidemy.com/lessons/reproduction-2/ by BBC bitesize - classnotes.gidemy.com/lessons/reproduction-the-genome-and-gene-expression/ by Save my exams - classnotes.gidemy.com/lessons/reproduction/
You explained more than my teacher can explain and made it not too hard to understand. My teacher recommended this since we’re now in quarantine and this does help👍
I have to say I love your tone and speed of speech and find that you put just the right amount of detail into your explaining videos. Thank your for your work, I appreciate it a lot
This is a great video, Thank you for making this. I just had a question, do we have to know the names for each stages? such as Anaphase, etc I am doing the Edexcel IGCSE 9-1
Thanks SO much for this amazing video! It’s very helpful! I understood it all perfectly until the very last question in the true and false questions.....Why does meiosis start with a diploid cell? I thought it started with a haploid? Please clarify for my sanity 🤪
Meiosis starts from a diploid cell because before meiosis can happen, mitosis should happen first. So the last stage of mitosis is where daughter cells are created and both cells are identical to one another. The 2 daughter cells split into 4 groups/cells since the process of meiosis is starting. Meiosis follows mitosis. The two sets of chromosomes that you see in the daughter cells are divided into only one set of chromosomes and only one set of chromosomes are then placed into each of the 4 groups/cells. This creates then different chromosomes and none are alike as they do not have the same genetic information as the daughter cells had during mitosis. This is how I understand it, but I might be wrong 🤷🏼♀️
cramming the night before and this is rlly helping me
Same bro.........
Hello Kpop stan......
girl same
With the help of other videos, now, i understand Mitosis and meiosis because you explained it quicker and simpler. Cheers Mr Exham
GCSE Biology - Reproduction
by xtreme papers - classnotes.gidemy.com/lessons/reproduction-2/
by BBC bitesize - classnotes.gidemy.com/lessons/reproduction-the-genome-and-gene-expression/
by Save my exams - classnotes.gidemy.com/lessons/reproduction/
Thanks 😊
You explained more than my teacher can explain and made it not too hard to understand. My teacher recommended this since we’re now in quarantine and this does help👍
I have to say I love your tone and speed of speech and find that you put just the right amount of detail into your explaining videos. Thank your for your work, I appreciate it a lot
I hate science and gcse's
edit: this taught me more than my science teacher ever has
Did not study for the exam that's in 2 days and wow-
I owe you!!!
howd it go?
Late but I have mine in 6 days snd I’m curious
wow passing my biology gcse thanks to one man only, thank you 😘
👍🏻
@@MrExhambio no, this means that the teacher should be fired wich is very not thums up
@@MrExhambio thank you for your video
im under a time cruch atm, my exams tomorrow and im so stressed 😂 thank u so much !❤️
Good luck !!
Oh! Thats one of the nicest explanations i've seen !! Thanks
vah vah DR. cool u r . THANKS U for this awesome video.
Very interesting!!
A well good explanation
This is so helpful! Thank you!
Dis guy is really marvelous
Better than my teacher
This is a great video, Thank you for making this. I just had a question, do we have to know the names for each stages? such as Anaphase, etc I am doing the Edexcel IGCSE 9-1
No you do not need to know the phases
@@MrExhambio Thank you!
Thanks a lot, I really understand the topic😃
Thank you for this video
Thank you very much! ❤
Can you tell us about red blood cells in detail please ❤....
Thanks SO much for this amazing video! It’s very helpful! I understood it all perfectly until the very last question in the true and false questions.....Why does meiosis start with a diploid cell? I thought it started with a haploid? Please clarify for my sanity 🤪
Meiosis starts from a diploid cell because before meiosis can happen, mitosis should happen first. So the last stage of mitosis is where daughter cells are created and both cells are identical to one another. The 2 daughter cells split into 4 groups/cells since the process of meiosis is starting. Meiosis follows mitosis. The two sets of chromosomes that you see in the daughter cells are divided into only one set of chromosomes and only one set of chromosomes are then placed into each of the 4 groups/cells. This creates then different chromosomes and none are alike as they do not have the same genetic information as the daughter cells had during mitosis.
This is how I understand it, but I might be wrong 🤷🏼♀️
F = False T = True
1.F
2.F
3.T
4.T
5.F
6.T
7.T
8.F
9.T
10.T
Helped thanks
Thank u so muchh
the second one in true or false should be true . isint it ?
It's 46, not 48.
Great advice ladies. Hope the food was super lush! Hope Eve got her nap 😴 as well. 😂 😂 😊
whattt???
@Hhhcf Hfszz XACTLY
Why does the guy have two wives
Are you British or Australian?
Please marry me
Tempting proposal but I’m already married I’m afraid 😂
@@MrExhambio Classic Mr Exham
That's so funny istg @@MrExhambio
ur wrong
Where was he wrong?
@@anuragthakur4341 3:09
@@maxmorrow7490 Yeah, it's binary fission. Overlooked that, you're correct