From what I know, no disadvantage whether you're an internal or external student looking to transfer to USYD law. Not the case for UNSW law- internal students have a higher likelihood of being transferred than external students. Getting a distinction in uni is achievable, but not as easy as you...
There is a JD program once you finish your undergrad degree, of course, again, it's highly competitive and depends on how well you did in your undergrad years.
Job opportunities better at UNSW, USYD, UTS OR MACQ? Honest opinions please! I know that employers consider grades as well as other stuff, but do they preference one uni over the other?
I'm a new employee at Boost and I've worked overtime for an hr this week. When it came to the end of my shift, my manager (who is one of those people you can't tell is joking or not) said I had to stay behind for 2 hours. He sounded dead serious so I kept working for a bit...then about 10min...
So confused as to whether type or write notes in lectures- on the one hand, typing would mean creating my own notes but don't really see the point if the lecture slides go up anyway? I'm taking humanities subjects if that helps
Some courses may be overcrowded and they may cite 'safety reasons' for encouraging people to just stay in the lectures in the timetable. However, most lectures will have spare seats so you can probably sneak in.
They're good as revision/extra practice/summary stuff. It shouldn't be the main textbook you rely on though, as often it may not be detailed or go into enough depth for complete knowledge of a subject area
Firstly, you wouldn't be called a 'psychologist'- the Board is really strict with this hence only those who have completed the full 6 years of study are registered psychologists. After three years, you would just be someone who studied psychology, able to be employed in marketing, research etc.