Maldini92 said:
Does it matter at all what University you go to after you get your degree? For example, will Student A who went to UNSW be given a lot more opportunities / options than say Student B who went to UWS? Or will it pretty much be the same, since its more about actual practice / experience later on.... not Uni prestige.
Different universities offer different experiences. Whether these differences constitute an advantage or a disadvantage depends on where you want your degree to take you.
USyd and UNSW have a monopoly on the big, super-specialised institutions (e.g. POW, RPA, Royal North Shore, Westmead, etc...) and so will have more elective opportunities in niche areas like fetal medicine, neurosurgery, neonatal intensive care and so forth. Note, though, that (1) medicine is not solely composed of elective opportunities and (2) electives at hospitals attached to other insitutions are often possible (depending on how a university sets up elective terms). Likewise, there may be potential differences in training settings, e.g. does the university have rural clinical schools? How many places are available, how competitive are they and do they preference rural bonded medical students? (N.B. big hospitals are not always all they are cracked up to be! It is all too easy to be forgotten amidst the crowd)
You can expect all universities to be competent at teaching the standard med sci, paeds, O&G, psych, GP, etc. combo. If the university is no good then (one should hope) they won't be acredited.
There may also be differences in research opportunities. Go8 universities (in the NSW region this means USyd, UNSW and ANU) can typically be expected to have bigger faculties with bigger budgets in both clinical medicine and medical science. For example, UNSW has its own faculty academics
as well as direct institutional ties with research bodies like the Garvan Institute, the POW Medical Research Institute, the Black Dog Institute,, the National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Research, etc. Whether or not this is an issue depends on whether you are keen on research and what your interests are. Universities with smaller budgets may nonetheless have strong research in specific areas.
Research and elective experience
could matter in some highly competitive areas like opthalmology, but in general I would expect post-graduate experience to carry more weight (things like referrals from supervisors, clinical experience, papers published and PhD research).
Po1nty probably has a better idea about this stuff than me.