White Rabbit
Bloody Shitcakes
Check out Queens in Belfast too, they have a pretty decent name,
OK. Not trying to blow my trumpet, but my average for Latin yearlys has been 100.3% (in years seven and nine I get a bonus mark for knowing a word out of the syllabus). I'd have loved to do Greek but the parents wouldn't let me (Latin was already too unconventional for them)PwarYuex said:1. If you're not the brightest crayon, or your grades are low, there's no way you're getting into Oxon. Classics, although a Latin advantage would help.
2. If you're poor, ditto.
3. Your parents sound like the strict asian type- how could we possibly help you with that.
4. You can set up a studying visa through Oxford, but not only will you have to pay your huge grades outright, but your living expenses also. The post of $50,000 AU a year would be about correct.
5. No way an undergrad foreigner doing Classics would get a scholarship, unless you were already fluent in Greek and Latin.
6. How about you do something like med first, then do classics? That was my initial plan in terms of law- do Law, then do history.
7, You have to go over there for an interview.
Ok, basically, you raised issues such as money, parents, and marks, then when I addressed them, you said they weren't a problem, and raised issues like you're immature. Frankly, if you're immature, you're going to have a hard time moving overseas and meeting new people, let alone going into uni.stella8h8chang said:OK. Not trying to blow my trumpet, but my average for Latin yearlys has been 100.3% (in years seven and nine I get a bonus mark for knowing a word out of the syllabus). I'd have loved to do Greek but the parents wouldn't let me (Latin was already too unconventional for them)
My parents probably could afford to send me there, but the question is, would they want to? Nope, they said they moved here for my education and they don't want me moving overseas and wasting opportunities....yadayadayada...
If you do med, you kind of get obliged to enter the profession straight after you finish, and keep there until the day you retire, so I'm reluctant about that.
Plus I'm too immature for medicine; I'm on the young side to start with, and secondly I've been sheltered for the psat 16 years of my life by my overprotective parents. I'm still bobbing around babbling, "53 days till Harry Potter!" and dressing up as a Hogwarts student. Up till the end of last year I didn't know what the c-word was. I can say I have been to one moderately "wild" party in all my life, and I will not be allowed to go to Schoolies. I think if you're going to be a good doctor, you need some knowledge of the world around you.
Well said.kimmeh said:, if you're "immature" then why do you want to do med? I was just talking to someone and they brought up that you are going to have encounter people with amputated limbs, and smashed faces from car accidents, and a screaming 8 year old child with a piece of glass in their eye. Are you up for this? I mean these arent the only things that you come across i can think of a bazillion cases that are worse than those mentioned. I think you need to make realistic goals that CAN be achieved and im sure that they can be answered yourself.
Heheh, I have oxford zip-up jumper, it's teh only item of clothing that "says anything" that I wear.Skillo said:Er. People are allowed to dream but do you just want to go there so you can tell your friends of your graduating class that you're going to Oxford. Err.
Just buy an Oxford university T-shirt online. It's about $49 950 cheaper than a first year at that place.
Don't underestimate the next 18 months as a source of life experience and maturity - a lot will change in that time frame. Ditto your at 4 (potential) years sutdying medicine - you see a lot, learn a lot and experience a lot that changes your perception of the world. Obviously you don't get everything in that time but there's an amazing amount going on to open your eyes.stella8h8chang said:OK. Not trying to blow my trumpet, but my average for Latin yearlys has been 100.3% (in years seven and nine I get a bonus mark for knowing a word out of the syllabus). I'd have loved to do Greek but the parents wouldn't let me (Latin was already too unconventional for them)
My parents probably could afford to send me there, but the question is, would they want to? Nope, they said they moved here for my education and they don't want me moving overseas and wasting opportunities....yadayadayada...
If you do med, you kind of get obliged to enter the profession straight after you finish, and keep there until the day you retire, so I'm reluctant about that.
Plus I'm too immature for medicine; I'm on the young side to start with, and secondly I've been sheltered for the psat 16 years of my life by my overprotective parents. I'm still bobbing around babbling, "53 days till Harry Potter!" and dressing up as a Hogwarts student. Up till the end of last year I didn't know what the c-word was. I can say I have been to one moderately "wild" party in all my life, and I will not be allowed to go to Schoolies. I think if you're going to be a good doctor, you need some knowledge of the world around you.
Sorry guys, I guess I've been taking out my frustration on you...it's not really fair, I know, to constantly bitch about my parents and the way I've been raised.mervvyn said:Don't underestimate the next 18 months as a source of life experience and maturity - a lot will change in that time frame. Ditto your at 4 (potential) years sutdying medicine - you see a lot, learn a lot and experience a lot that changes your perception of the world. Obviously you don't get everything in that time but there's an amazing amount going on to open your eyes.
Not to discourage you, but being able to do things with goldfish is different to treating real people. Also while you might be able to watch an operation in progress, while you're in the room yourself and actually operation on someone, your hand covered in blood, it's quite a different environment. In addition working in developing or remote areas you will have less access to supplies and equipment, and more things can go wrong in an operation than say a scheduled one in a big hospital in a capital city, and being able to handle that kind of shock under such pressure is not a skill many people have straight away. So actually prepare yourself for the possible trauma you might face instead of possibly enclosing yourself in a false protective blanket.stella8h8chang said:Don't worry; I'm not afraid of blood; I've got goldfish and I've had to do stuff like scooping corpses out of the pond, dissections when someone dies and you can't figure it out, dosing them with medicines, making a diagnosis based on my fishy encyclopedia... Besides, ever since I could sit up I've watched videos of my dad's operations.
Yeah. Why do something you enjoy? I mean, life's a bitch, you should work hard in a degree, work in a hard job, then die putting up a fight. Psht, why the heck would you want to do something that you'd actually ENJOY?! :rollseyes:velox said:Do something useful, and dont waste ~$40k on a useless classics degree, you'll regret it
Jeez, the International Latin Exam Intro level...we have like 5 kids getting full marks from our school every year in that. Then there are about 2-3 in level 1 and normally one in level 2, and possibly one in level 3. I think. Sorry to be rude. I was actually talking about my school end-of-year exams which aren't multiple choice so I was worried you may have misunderstood me.velox said:be careful 100.3% isnt that good. Even my brother managed 100% in the national latin exam (intro to latin).
It seems like the only reason you want to go to Oxford is the status. No-one really cares these days. My cuz went to cambridge, and said its nothing special except for the free arts degree. Do something useful, and dont waste ~$40k on a useless classics degree, you'll regret it