i would think so
given that public schools are secular
and if she/he goes to a religious school then it would already be assumed they are of that faith
a person who was a massive failure as a teacher and now spends their days "advising" students on how to succeed in life
obviously taking life lessons from someone who has failed at life is going to get you SO FAR
serious post time but your adviser is an idiot
you're already feeling helpless, so they give you this dumb suggestion of "finding a faith" - which is essentially going to make you feel more helpless because actually, choosing a religion is a momentous decision and not something you should do...
may i suggest the church of the flying spaghetti monster
http://www.venganza.org/about/
With millions, if not thousands, of devout worshippers, the Church of the FSM is widely considered a legitimate religion, even by its opponents – mostly fundamentalist Christians, who have accepted that...
how about instead of worshiping some moongod in the sky and having faith in complete and utter bullshit
you have *faith* in yourself and your own abilities?
Not really.
There is a great demand for hospital scientists at most of the major hospitals. Especially if you go on and specialise in shit like cytology, cytogenetics, etc. Heavy demand.
Do some bridging courses, would be my suggestion.
My other suggestion would be to look carefully at this. Career prospects in Australia for forensic scientists aren't great, because we don't have a burgeoning market for it. They're competitive and limited.
Well there's a lot. First year at CSU for example, you do physics in first and second semester. You then do another one in third year. And then when you go on to do subjects in MRI and ultrasound, there is more physics, because MR physics is different from your normal rad physics.
Pharmacy has a heavy chemistry component.
I mean if you apply yourself it's possible to do these degrees without foundations in chem or phys from high school, but you're entering in with no background information and unlike year 11/12 where you have two years to learn it, most semesters are 13...
I wouldn't like to try it.
Radiology has a heavy physics component. Unless you're doing 2U maths, I wouldn't like to try and attempt radiation physics without some sort of background in maths or high school physics.