As for other information from my experience:
Most courses involve group work and as most students are internationals, you will learn from experience that it can be very frustrating working with the internationals. As a student searching for 85+ in each course alot of the time it meant that you are better off just doing the work yourself. This can be the same experience in uni though, although uni has more local students theres still a very high percentage of internationals. Its mean saying this but most of the time they drag you down (although some locals can drag you down and dedicated internationals can be very helpful) so most of the time i was searching for other local students to team up with in SIBT so I didnt have to do the assignments myself and/or didnt have to REDO their work.
in SIBT in the accounting and finance courses they have made dedicated workbooks that no one receives in uni. They are much easier to learn from (lecture material and examples/homework/tutorial work all in the same book). In uni all the content would be mixed up between lecture slides and a textbook whereas with SIBT you knew everything in the final exam came from this one book that you could solely study from. Although the SIBT exams were probably similar in content to the UNI exams, it meant the SIBT exam was easier because SIBT narrowed down what you had to study whereas generally in uni courses they probably tell you to study the whole relevant chapters in the textbook.
I understood lectures much easier in SIBT than in uni. Firstly the lectures are 3 hours instead of 2 hours in uni, meaning they can do it at a slower pace, use more examples, and make sure everyone understands. In uni, lecture theatres hold hundreds of people, in SIBT i think its 40 people max. It actually makes quite a difference. eg if you dont understand something in uni, you might feel awkward holding up a 150+ lecture theatre full of people just because you didnt understand something. If its 40 people i never hesitated to ask the lecturer to explain something again and also as a local student if you didnt understand it, chances are the rest of the SIBT class didnt understand it.
The big downside to my experience was the perception that SIBT students are "lower class". Although learning was easier i couldnt wait to move to uni so that i could call myself a uni student. Felt a little embarrassed saying i went to SIBT. Alot of the internationals feel the same way. At the start of the semester they give out free SIBT shirts to students. You rarely saw anyone wearing them, ever.