There's a young English teacher at our school who came this year. She did her hsc in 2004, and she got 100 UAI and 4 state ranks. We all wonder why she does teaching, when she had so many options, but hey, you do what you want to do.
Thanks, I think I remember. This is why teachers teach, to hear such beautiful words like yours.You probably do not remember but you answered another question of mine not too long ago. Your answer was something I was truly grateful for, it actually could be the reason why I'm reaching my potential at school once again and finding contentment.
Woah, I don't want to drop all this emotional passels onto you but yes...
That I would consider as a skill and a rather excellent one at that.
your ability to help ppl greatly increases if u studied medicineThat wouldnt be very practical, medical training can take about 10-15 years and is extremely difficult if you dont have a passion for it.
True, but if the OP isnt really interested in helping people through being a doctor then doing a medical degree would be insane, simply because it is too difficult to complete if you dont have the passion.your ability to help ppl greatly increases if u studied medicine
I would have liked to really, but it truly is amazing what happens at my school. People all expect an ATAR above 99.0 and have already begun to 'train' for UMAT. It is no longer that distant dream for many of them like I still hold, it's all med med med, law law law.Just saying, but you're in year 11 and that's an estimate. Calm the fuck down and think about it later lol
I arrantly agree with this, I sometimes happen to forget that because there are very similiar people at my school. They are extremely intelligent but opt only for the law and med choices as well.Also remember that just because a course has a high atar requirement doesn’t necessarily mean that it is more intellectually challenging or for ‘smarter’ people, it’s just an indicator of how popular the course is.
Since you’re passionate about what you want to do, it’s in no way a ‘waste of potential’, because you’ll obviously succeed in that field and achieve greater things than if you were stuck in a career path which you did not particularly enjoy.
There are SO many people at my school who ‘want’ to do law and med, and sure they’re smart, but at the end of the day, most of them are in it for the money + prestige and nothing else, which I reckon will make for a poor generation of doctors/lawyers who don’t actually care about what they do.
I have to dissent with this actually, if you aren't passionate about helping other people and wanting to see that smile when you drastically change one's life, I think you would be a hopeless doctor.you dont have to be particularly passionate about med to do it, and OP said that it was either medicine or the social worker one