I reserve the right to be corrected!
Anyway, it seems that UAC allows you to enter some preferences for University courses way back, months before you even do your HSC exams, back before you even know what the hell UAI is, not to mention what the courses are about and how university is structured.
So if you fail to apply to get your UAC number ID thing and make a few random, or at best uninformed choices in choosing a few courses by 7th December (as arbitrary as anything as far as I can see) your choices will be disregarded in the Main Round of Offers. Now my question is why the hell is that?
If a person who made random choices before doing their exams is allowed to change their preferences by early January why should their application be considered for the main round of offers while the person who waited till they got their HSC results and their UAI before applying wont be considered?
It seems absurd, so I hope I am wrong and someone can correct me here. Otherwise what possible reason would UAC have for doing this? Money comes to mind.
Why not simply issue everyone the right to select and choose their preferences for free and with a closing date that is after the UAI comes out. Then, simply charge those that wish to apply to University an administration fee. Why the hell are they allowed to implement this stupid system to make money with these seemingly random late application dates, which thereby force everyone to pay some "Processing" fee to enter random preferences months before you even do the HSC exams. The result is that this forces everyone to pay that $22 in order to have the choice to enter a university because if one should wait till they got their UAI before they apply they have to pay 7 times that and yes, the best part is their application wont even be considered in the main round.
As I said, I hope I am wrong and that someone could point this out, otherwise one must ask whether this system is about making money or enabling students to enter into a university. If its the former, why the hell is nothing being done about this?
Anyway, it seems that UAC allows you to enter some preferences for University courses way back, months before you even do your HSC exams, back before you even know what the hell UAI is, not to mention what the courses are about and how university is structured.
So if you fail to apply to get your UAC number ID thing and make a few random, or at best uninformed choices in choosing a few courses by 7th December (as arbitrary as anything as far as I can see) your choices will be disregarded in the Main Round of Offers. Now my question is why the hell is that?
If a person who made random choices before doing their exams is allowed to change their preferences by early January why should their application be considered for the main round of offers while the person who waited till they got their HSC results and their UAI before applying wont be considered?
It seems absurd, so I hope I am wrong and someone can correct me here. Otherwise what possible reason would UAC have for doing this? Money comes to mind.
Why not simply issue everyone the right to select and choose their preferences for free and with a closing date that is after the UAI comes out. Then, simply charge those that wish to apply to University an administration fee. Why the hell are they allowed to implement this stupid system to make money with these seemingly random late application dates, which thereby force everyone to pay some "Processing" fee to enter random preferences months before you even do the HSC exams. The result is that this forces everyone to pay that $22 in order to have the choice to enter a university because if one should wait till they got their UAI before they apply they have to pay 7 times that and yes, the best part is their application wont even be considered in the main round.
As I said, I hope I am wrong and that someone could point this out, otherwise one must ask whether this system is about making money or enabling students to enter into a university. If its the former, why the hell is nothing being done about this?