theone123
blue essence
go there thenFinalFantasy said:the cost doesn't matter... u might pay 100k for da whole medicine course, but after dat u make a lot more... in australia even if u want to pay that amount u can't
go there thenFinalFantasy said:the cost doesn't matter... u might pay 100k for da whole medicine course, but after dat u make a lot more... in australia even if u want to pay that amount u can't
You also have SAT and ACT scores at most universities over there. Plus the admission essays and extracirricular stuff they take into account.Lexicographer said:In the US you only need a certain GPA to be admitted to a College (university). However, that's not all there is to the story. First of all, college admissions are more competitive over there and there are a lot more of them. The main competition isn't to get into a college, but to get into WORTHWHILE college. Unlike here, the quality of courses is not assured and there are plenty of local colleges who may award you a degree which would simply be laughed at by employers.
Secondly, to "get in" and pass doesn't assure you of a profession - courses in US colleges are all of a general education type, where students take a major but must also study other things to be more "rounded" in their education. This has its benefits, as educated few in America actually know about stuff that isn't in their major field of interest and aren't narrow in their intelligence. However, this also means that you don't graduate and enter an actual profession. Once you finish your first degree to get into anything worthwhile (Medicine, Law, Business, Pharmacy etc) you go BACK to college and study on. This is why Americans have "premeds" and "prelaws" - they are undergraduate students working to attain their first qualification so they can then go on to their graduate courses.
To enter the graduate courses you then need to fulfil a GPA cutoff, and their equivalents are even tougher than the UAI cutoffs we see here for Law and Medicine at the primary institutions (eg Harvard). Of course, you could get in with a lower score - if you don't mind getting your MD (MBBS) or JD (LLB) at Bob's College-O-Rama.
well atm yes..Sweet_Lemon said:AUS hav more generous welfare system.... HECS loans......
maybe they did scaling down subjects, or maybe you can get into uni with an 80...?flyin' said:In reply to original post:
Don't you think people with UAIs of 90, 95 100 would be hard working as well?
If you end up with 80 and are hard working, that might tell you something - maybe uni isn't the place to be for you.
And who said life was fair?
true. what other way is there. you cant just say "im smart" or throw an IQ at selectors...Asquithian said:obviously...but GENERALLY uai is the best indication of ability. Of course there are exceptions...
looks as tho i was referring to med, but the idea can be applied to other things. take law for example at unsw/usyd. i wouldn't like someone's chances of doing well if they were hardworking for the hsc and managed 80.ur_inner_child said:maybe they did scaling down subjects, or maybe you can get into uni with an 80...?
I hope you just meant medicine, not just uni in general.
that's a pretty simple-minded arguementFinalFantasy said:According to a uni student in Canada, you don't need any specific "UAI" to enter desired courses there.. all you need to do in high school is get an average mark, that lets you get into uni... den u can do any course you like...
That means those ppl who would only get like 80 UAI in australia could've done things like Medicine in uni!!
that's unfair isn't it!!