How to apply for the Sydney LLB - Local students - Future students - The University of Sydney
Quoting from the webpage,
Applicants who have a recognised tertiary qualification will generally be considered on the better of either the tertiary qualification alone or the combination of their secondary qualification and tertiary qualification. Admission is competitive. Recent experience suggests that a UAI over 97 and/or a tertiary-grade point average in the distinction range are necessary to gain entry, although this will vary according to the strength of the field in any given year.
For the first time, in 2009 you can transfer based on your "tertiary qualification alone." This means even if you got a UAI of 60 you could transfer into USYD Law as long as you have solid Uni grades (At least D average +). Previously, the Uni transfer people looked at both your UAI and Uni grades (50% each) but now they only look at both if UAI marks > Uni grades. How they compare UAI with Uni I'm not so sure but they must scale them together somehow.
Quoting from the webpage,
Applicants who have a recognised tertiary qualification will generally be considered on the better of either the tertiary qualification alone or the combination of their secondary qualification and tertiary qualification. Admission is competitive. Recent experience suggests that a UAI over 97 and/or a tertiary-grade point average in the distinction range are necessary to gain entry, although this will vary according to the strength of the field in any given year.
For the first time, in 2009 you can transfer based on your "tertiary qualification alone." This means even if you got a UAI of 60 you could transfer into USYD Law as long as you have solid Uni grades (At least D average +). Previously, the Uni transfer people looked at both your UAI and Uni grades (50% each) but now they only look at both if UAI marks > Uni grades. How they compare UAI with Uni I'm not so sure but they must scale them together somehow.