RogueAcademic
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I should add that I think with some decent PAE, whether it's an LLB or JD won't matter very much at all.
Forgive my ignorance--PAE?RogueAcademic said:I should add that I think with some decent PAE, whether it's an LLB or JD won't matter very much at all.
circusmind said:Forgive my ignorance--PAE?
So do you think that someone who happens to do a 'graduate' BA should then get a KD (an equally-puzzling choice of letter until it's explained), or should simply note that they're a graduate in all their documentation and actually prove themselves?RogueAcademic said:Technically yes. But in reality no. In my experience there is a world of difference between the average LLB graduate and a JD graduate. The JD graduate generally brings a lot more professional experience than a young LLB graduate does. In the JD courses at Monash and at Melb Uni bring in a lot of older experienced students. And that is how the JD students are differentiated from LLB grads.
Completely different context. Makes no difference if it's a KD or BLitt in an arts context.PwarYuex said:So do you think that someone who happens to do a 'graduate' BA should then get a KD (an equally-puzzling choice of letter until it's explained), or should simply note that they're a graduate in all their documentation and actually prove themselves?
You don't seem to be quite addressing the point that both PwarYeux and I are making.RogueAcademic said:Completely different context. Makes no difference if it's a KD or BLitt in an arts context.
Another example - Melbourne Uni will be dropping their MBBS program and will have a US version instead, meaning Melb Uni med students will graduate with an MD. But it won't make a difference because Australia needs doctors and in the beginning the MD will only mean that the med graduate is a Melb Uni alumni. But increasingly, you can see that some med schools are openly stating that they prefer med school applicants to have a background in the health profession, like nurses, physiotherapists etc. It helps show that you have some experience in health care and treatment.
Which they even admit!KFunk said:Melbourne's decision to award an MD, rather than MBBS, is all about marketing. Much the same for LLB vs JD. It's superficial bollocks.
Ack I didn't see your second post.KFunk said:Adding to that:
It irks me partly because I see it as part of a general trend to bypass quality of education in favour of fancy degree titles, fast-tracked degrees, artifically inflated grades and inflexible, but beaurocratically simpler, degree requirements (why on earth should I have to complete a 1st year philosophy course as part of my major when I already know the material and could complete a more rigorous 3xxx level course instead?).
hahah, university bureaucracy will kill any idealism. I sat in a 2hr meeting, in which at least 30 minutes was devoted to the idea that the subject labels above the respective assignment drop-boxes should have a less intimidating font, and definitely not be printed in capitals because it SCARES STUDENTS. :SIt saddens my inner idealist.
If you're not already aware, many top tier and mid tier law firms use cvMail as a way to organise clerkship and traineeship applications. If you're a law student, you should get familiar with it as early as possible. You plug in your academic results, your degree(s), your CV and other personal details. Each law firm will then filter the applications according to their individual requirements. As you know, some law firms receive thousands more applications than they have available vacancies. So CVMail is a mechanism with which they use to ease the distillation process.KFunk said:You don't seem to be quite addressing the point that both PwarYeux and I are making.
Or, they may search through applicants as two distinct groups of LLB or JD. This is because accompanying CVs from JD applicants will generally be much more extensive that those from straight-out-of-school LLB graduates, and will play a much larger role in applicant selection than from LLB graduates. CVs from LLB graduates will generally be based more on academic results and possibly other extracurricular uni-related achievements like moot court participation, law essay prizes etc.KFunk said:- the degree title doesn't mean squat.
KFunk said:There are plenty of graduate medical programs in Australia and they generally award MBBS (whereas MD is usually reserved as a higher research degree in Aus and Britain). Melbourne's decision to award an MD, rather than MBBS, is all about marketing. Much the same for LLB vs JD.
Marketing absolutely plays a crucial role, that's never been a secret at all..... the tertiary education sector is a multi-million dollar industry, there's supply and demand, reputation and trademarks to protect, universities are not charity organisations. Did you think marketing played no role in the formation of the Go8? Glyn Davis has also said that he wants to bring UMelb more in line with the US system and recognition, hence the name and program changes.PwarYuex said:Which they even admit!
You should put that in an email and send it to Harvard, Yale, Columbia, UCLA, and all the other Ivy League universities about their fancy degree titles, fast-tracked degrees, artificially inflated grades and inflexible but bureaucratically simpler, degree requirements. I think a revolution is at hand to change it all back to non-fancy degree titles, slow-tracked degrees, genuinely deflated grades, and flexible but bureaucratically complicated degree requirements.KFunk said:It irks me partly because I see it as part of a general trend to bypass quality of education in favour of fancy degree titles, fast-tracked degrees, artifically inflated grades and inflexible, but beaurocratically simpler, degree requirements.
UCLA isn't an Ivy. Los Angeles is sorta on the other side of America to them. I don't even think Ivy would grow in California... But anyway...RogueAcademic said:You should put that in an email and send it to Harvard, Yale, Columbia, UCLA, and all the other Ivy League universities
Which of those unis have fancy 'degree titles'? Not that I really know what you mean by 'title' - do you mean major, or what myself and KFunk are talking about - the name of the degree?about their fancy degree titles
Again...? How are they fast-tracked, how are grades artificially inflated, and how the hell would you call a top-tier uni in the US 'inflexible'? :-/, fast-tracked degrees, artificially inflated grades and inflexible but bureaucratically simpler, degree requirements.
No but UCLA's law school is one of the top tier law schools in the US, on par with the Ivy Leagues.PwarYuex said:UCLA isn't an Ivy... Los Angeles is sorta on the other side of America to them... But anyway...
lol on the contrary, I think you are a bit lost in the debate. Do you realise you're arguing my point for me against kfunk's argument? I could leave it to kfunk to explain to you what he was getting at, or you could go back and read his post.PwarYuex said:Which of those unis have fancy 'degree titles'? Not that I really know what you mean by 'title' - do you mean major, or what myself and KFunk are talking about - the name of the degree?
The bottom line is that straight out of high-school, if students want to go to an Ivy, UCLA, Chicago, etc, 95% of students look at a BSc or a BA. How is any of that fancy? It's not at all.
Again...? How are they fast-tracked, how are grades artificially inflated, and how the hell would you call a top-tier uni in the US 'inflexible'? :S
Anyway, if you knew anything about US admissions, you'd see it has nothing to do with 'artificially inflated grades'... :S
To be honest, I think you really have no idea what you're talking about.
I would hardly call any discourse with you a 'debate'. Generally if someone quotes someone and then responds, it implied that they've read their post, mate.RogueAcademic said:lol on the contrary, I think you are a bit lost in the debate. Do you realise you're arguing my point for me against kfunk's argument? I could leave it to kfunk to explain to you what he was getting at, or you could go back and read his post.
Well, I see you've given up debating on the points and resorted to schoolboy insults instead...PwarYuex said:I would hardly call any discourse with you a 'debate'. Generally if someone quotes someone and then responds, it implied that they've read their post, mate.
Tbh, I think you should give up.
Sorry, I updated my post. See above.RogueAcademic said:Well, I see you've given up debating on the points and resorted to schoolboy insults instead...
I'd say that was pretty much a one-sided biased summary, anything you don't understand or agree with is 'gibberish'. And that's what I mean by your 'schoolboy' mentality.PwarYuex said:Just to summarise:
1. You said that having a specifically-named degree was important for graduands of that degree, because it then showed that they were better experienced, etc.
2. KFunk then pointed out that you can just say that you did a grad degree, as you're effectively studying the same thing.
3. I then asked whether you thought that people who thus did a graduate Arts degree should be awarded something else. (You responded that this is a 'different context', which I think we all know... We're wondering why you think the examples are not analogous...)
4. KFunk pointed out that my example was analogous, and this is the very point. He commented that marketing was obviously the main factor, and that the result made him sad.
5. I said that pretty much anything to do with university bureaucracy would make him sad.
6. You posted a bunch of gibberish which didn't actually respond to anything.
7. I replied to this.
8. Now you're implying I'm somehow lost in the debate.
Anything else? Tbh, I think you should give up.
Well then why don't you address my direct questions to you, or indeed correct my summary? :-/I'd say that was pretty much a one-sided biased summary, anything you don't understand or agree with is 'gibberish'. And that's what I mean by your 'schoolboy' mentality.
Simple, because if you read carefully, you've argued my points for me against kfunk's comments which I gave you the link to.Well then why don't you address my direct questions to you, or indeed correct my summary? :-/