Flop21
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- Joined
- May 12, 2013
- Messages
- 2,807
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- HSC
- 2015
Okay, so at a top university (e.g. the top uni for a particular degree/field) are assessments harder?
I would imagine the standard to be much higher than of a lower regarded uni. Purely because you have uni A with a 90+ ATAR requirement, hence all kids in the course have received a 90+ ATAR. Then you have uni B with a 70 ATAR requirement, hence kids with around that ATAR (bit mixed). Obviously at uni A assessments will have to be harder because the kids' are academically stronger (you can't just let everyone get HDs). So therefore you end up with uni B having average assessments, and uni A having harder assessments.
So obviously in uni A, it's going to be much harder to get a higher WAM or GPA than at uni B.
NOW, I hear everywhere that employers don't care about your uni, only your grades (WAM or GPA). I'm not sure if this is true or not. If it is, then obviously it's going to advantage people going to lower unis with less harder assessments (because it's easier to get higher grades).
But obviously the person at uni A who has been pushed to a higher standard will academically be better off, yet on the employment side of things - they are not. Now this is only if employers truly don't give a crap about what uni you go to.
But I've also heard some people say that employers DO know what the top unis are and will take that into consideration when looking at grades.
So I'm wondering what's true?
I would imagine the standard to be much higher than of a lower regarded uni. Purely because you have uni A with a 90+ ATAR requirement, hence all kids in the course have received a 90+ ATAR. Then you have uni B with a 70 ATAR requirement, hence kids with around that ATAR (bit mixed). Obviously at uni A assessments will have to be harder because the kids' are academically stronger (you can't just let everyone get HDs). So therefore you end up with uni B having average assessments, and uni A having harder assessments.
So obviously in uni A, it's going to be much harder to get a higher WAM or GPA than at uni B.
NOW, I hear everywhere that employers don't care about your uni, only your grades (WAM or GPA). I'm not sure if this is true or not. If it is, then obviously it's going to advantage people going to lower unis with less harder assessments (because it's easier to get higher grades).
But obviously the person at uni A who has been pushed to a higher standard will academically be better off, yet on the employment side of things - they are not. Now this is only if employers truly don't give a crap about what uni you go to.
But I've also heard some people say that employers DO know what the top unis are and will take that into consideration when looking at grades.
So I'm wondering what's true?