Student246 said:
I am doing electrical engineering but I am afraid I may not complete it if I get a Weighted Average Mark of less than 50, 3 or 4 times.
Also what I am more afraid of is the treatise I have to do for that.
I was just thinking I should have not started uni without being prepared to be more disciplined.
What I want to do if I can not complete electrical engineering is to transfer to B Science and become a teacher. But I reall really would rather be an engineer. I think I can do it with more discipline and time. I want to transfer to teacher just before they kick me out which is why I think it sucks that they would take my fail grade and pass grade together, that seems mean and unnecessary.
What else I want to do is go to a different university and start all over again but I only want to do that when I gave the first uni a full go.
If I go to another course for just 1 year will they take just those marks and my UAI?
How can they stop someone from doing what they really want to do and what they were born capable with.
If I was not growing older I would not complain.
firstly you may want to consider if engineering is for you, ok you may end up getting your engineering degree with fails in the first year, then you scrape all passes for the remaining 4 years. how would that look to a potential employer? you need a lot more than just a pass average if you are to get a decent job in engineering (any course for that matter)
i think u can always get into B.Sci no matter what your GPA/UAI is.
like many people have said, you can do the Stat exam, some unis will look at that solely. do some research on the STAT exam, advantage is that it only takes one day to do, and u dont really need to study much/at all for it.
alternatively if you stuff up engineering and your GPA, u may take a year to do the TPC. (though that takes a year to do and time is money)
alternatively you can take a year and do a course at tafe ~ you could do something related towards your new teaching degree at tafe.
alternatively there are pre-university prep programs run by UNSW (and i think Usyd, UTS has them too) graduate from that (and it is very very easy) and you can pretty much get into any course u want. (except medicine, optometry, dentistry, pharmacy)
then there are mature age schemes. where you list your achievements, work experience etc and they will assess mainly whether you are capable/motivated enough to complete the course.
then there are a few distance education providers that have pretty easy entry requirements, i think deakin and CSU are known for their distance education programs.
i suggest what you need to do is go buy the UAC handbook from the newsagent and read each and every universities entry schemes.
there are heaps of alternative entry schemes other than the UAI and the GPA.
good luck