the most recent debrief publication of Young Lawyers website.Asquithian said:where did you pull those stats from frigid?
the most recent debrief publication of Young Lawyers website.Asquithian said:where did you pull those stats from frigid?
Don't do psych/law, do Arts/Law majoring in Psych for your Arts portion. That way you won't be restricted. Or you could do Science/Law majoring in Psych if you are more science inclinded.rink said:If your doing a combined law degree eg: psychology and law and lets say i get bored of psych after a semester and dont want to do it anymore but i still wanna do law, what happens then? Can i drop psych and do law combined with something else instead eg:social science? If i do that, i wont have to start the law stuff all over again will I? Sorry if my q's r stupid lol, just wanna make sure.
But Arts (psych) isn't the same as a pure psych/law degree is it?MoonlightSonata said:Don't do psych/law, do Arts/Law majoring in Psych for your Arts portion. That way you won't be restricted. Or you could do Science/Law majoring in Psych if you are more science inclinded.
No, it isn't. But majoring in psych gives you the same qualification recognised by the APS (at least at relevant universities, such as USYD).santaslayer said:But Arts (psych) isn't the same as a pure psych/law degree is it?
Not any more, as of 2006 UOW offer a straight undergraduate law degree. 3 years of substantive stuff plus a year of practical training or honours.hfis said:As far as I know, you cannot drop the 'other' degree altogether - ie, you still need to be a grad to do the straight LLB.
Which Ms 12 is planning on doing. :uhhuh:Ms 12 said:Not any more, as of 2006 UOW offer a straight undergraduate law degree. 3 years of substantive stuff plus a year of practical training or honours.
Oh joy, that's excellent news. The F I'm headed for in one of my core med science subjects isn't so bad now.Ms 12 said:Not any more, as of 2006 UOW offer a straight undergraduate law degree. 3 years of substantive stuff plus a year of practical training or honours.
like everything else in this world, it's a matter of supply/demand, the perceived difficulty of straight law, and present value of future expected cashflows.lala2 said:Yeah, I heard about the straight LLB's. I'm surprised that the cutoffs for the current one at UTS is not as high as I thought it was, considering that you're not 'wasting' your time doing the other degree, and just go straight in to become a lawyer. Anyone know why?