 My name is Manuela Carnaghi and I am a professional and demonstrator for the School of Science here at the University of Greenwich. I am Dr Sarah Harris. I am a lecturer here at the University of Greenwich. My research specialty is fish biology and aquatic health. Here at the University, if you decide to study biology, you will be able to choose between different modules, meaning that then you can target whatever is that fascinates you the most. During my undergrad, I did my final year project on plants. Then for my master, I went on and studied slugs and I used parasites in a way to control the slugs. So I spent from plants to slugs and then parasites. One of the massive pros of our program is how broad it is and the different options that you have, the different pathways that you can take. We have several different facilities with different equipments and we produce all cool kind of research. And our students are very much involved in that. For my PhD, I focused on malaria mosquitoes and how they behave when they are host-seeking, meaning when they are trying to find a host where they can feed on. So one of the projects that we are working on here at Greenwich as part of a grant awarded to Dr Joanna Meast is the use of oysters as sentinel organisms within aquaculture. So using oysters as an alternative organism to detect pathogens rather than taking from the fish themselves. We also have a variety of societies. So the social aspect of living here at the university is also quite important. These societies span from fun activities like climbing, for example, to academic activities. So for example, gathering with students that are interested on a particular topic. For example, we have the paramedic society and the cancer society where students talk about their interest in there. So it creates a nice sense of community. In terms of career, for example, in my personal experience, I had the opportunity of working in several different environments. I was lucky enough to be able to work as an assistant project manager in Mozambique. Before I started my PhD, I also worked as a high school teacher where I taught biology for a year. So I feel that biology is a very good field and it gives you that broadened view of what's happening around you. Like what you've heard today, some of the various aspects of the biology program about the research that we have, the teaching that we do. There is a very wide range of careers that you can go into from a biology degree to research, into the civil service, into any kind of thing really that requires that kind of analytical way of thinking that you will acquire through a biology degree. I hope you found this interesting and that this has opened your eyes on the different possibilities that biology can offer.