Comrade nathan said:
Questions
1) The 16th we get offers mailed to us?
2) If we dont make it we dont get mail?
3)How do we accept?
I hope to be doing B arts or B social Science, because i want to do anthropology. How many
4) How manye subjects do i choose for the degree?
5) Do i have to do minor and major, and how many?
6) On here
http://ccdb.newcastle.edu.au/courseinfo/displayprogram.cfm?docid=392&FOS=2&UGPG=13 it says i have to do 240 units over the 3 years, what does this mean?
7) On that website under each subject title there is a list of topics, do i have to choose thoose topics or are the prescribed?
8) When do i choose the subject?
Always make sure you find out more than you need to know; your time at uni will involve lots of planning, and not just in studying. e.g. there could be administrative problems and it'll be up to you to know who to approach and how to deal with it. Better to be prepared.
Nevertheless, here's a lengthy general explanation:
1,2,3) UAC will mail you regardless. They will show you your preference list and indicate which, if any, course has been offered to you. UAC will also supply the directions to accepting an offer.
8) You will formally enrol at a time set by the Uni. It is usually then that you choose your subjects. You would also by this time know or be introduced to your Course Advisor/Co-ordinator who is like your year advisor throughout your entire course of study - they deal with your study as a whole, and will guide you through choosing subjects.
4,5,6,7) Subjects or units are like the subjects you do in high school (but obviously different in other ways). The HSC required >10units, and each subject counted for either 1 or 2 units. Similarly, a Degree Course requires a certain amount of units that you need to study and pass before you can graduate, and every subject represents a certain amount of units/credit/points, depending on the Uni's system.
Most subjects are studied for one semester; and you'd usually study four subjects per semester. So over several years, you 'collect' enough subjects, units, credits et al. which qualifies you to graduate.
Majors and minors represent a 'group' of related subjects. Studying the minimum amount of subjects in these 'groups' indicates to the uni that you have gained in-depth knowledge in that area. e.g. A Psychology Major would be a group of subjects/units that represent an in-depth study in Psychology.
Most Degree Courses will require you to study in at least one Major. In some cases, the entire degree course is one big Major study. Arts and SocSci degrees give you the flexibilty to choose. So in your case, nathan, this will be Anthropology, and there will be a set/group of subjects that you must study if you are to be recognised as having studied Anthropology in-depth.
Also there are Core or Prescribed subjects. These are the subjects you *must* study *in addition* to your chosen Major study; they usually provide a general foundation knowledge, or as 'capstone' units such as final-year projects.
You may choose to do additional Major or Minor studies. For example, if a course requires you to study 240 units, and each subject counts as 10 each, and one Major requires a minimum 8 subjects, then to complete a Major study means you'd have to complete 80 units, with another 160units left to go, and say the Core subjects total another 80units, in which case you'd have another 80units to go. You could study those remaining units on more subjects from the same Major, furthering your knowledge in that area, or you could do something from another area.
Your Course Advisor should be able to tell you which subjects comprise which 'group' of Major/Minor studies or are Core subjects, and will help you enrol in the correct ones for what you want. You won't choose all the subjects you would be studying over the 3(or howmany) years; you'd enrol and select the subjects for the first semester, usually the ones designed to be easier before progressing to more difficult subjects (again the Course Advisor should be able to tell you which ones).
By 2nd semester, you'd know how it works, so I guess what to do now (nathan, and anyone else in the same position) is to think about the area or topic you'd like to study, if you haven't already.
I hope I haven't complicated things with such a long explanation, but I wanted to cover everything (I knew a fellow student who enrolled in subjects from four different Majors, thinking it was possible to study four Majors in-depth over 3 years. Obviously by 2nd semester he had to choose which areas would be his specialisations)
But the
Golden Rule is:
Talk to your Course Advisor (when you know who he/she is). If they seem lost too (they won't though), find a fellow student who knows what they're doing.
-andy