shouldn't have much of a drama with that gpa or uai..coopert said:Hey,
Im currently studying [Bachelor of Arts in International Studies / Bachelor of Laws] at University of Canberra.
My 2007 UAI was pretty low (83.55), however UC offered 5 Bonus Points which explains how I made the cutoff. During my first semester of study in 2008, I got a GPA of 5.75.
Providing that I achieve similar grades in my 2nd semester for 2008, what would you feel my chances would be of a successful External Transfer into the 2nd year of my current degree at Macquarie University for 2009??
Any advice much appreciated!!
http://www.futurestudent.mq.edu.au/undergraduate/ApplyingAndEnrolling/AlternativePathways/index.htmlFor students who have only completed up to six months of tertiary study and seek to reapply through UAC, they will be selected based on the best of their tertiary study OR their UAI, whichever is higher.
Yaymaserativ8 said:I believe you ari.
what's FTE? lol.ari89 said:Some successful UAC transfers to Macquarie combined law last for 08:
(GPA 5 = credit, GPA 4 = Pass)
So transferring externally doesn't look like the biggest challenge.
excuse me for ringing in on this thread but wow that's quite a bold table.ari89 said:Some successful UAC transfers to Macquarie combined law last for 08:
(GPA 5 = credit, GPA 4 = Pass)
So transferring externally doesn't look like the biggest challenge.
from the Macquarie Law website: http://www.law.mq.edu.au/html/undergraduate/futurestudents/school_leavers_faq.htm#5- As a guide, you will need a UAI of 90 and obtain a Distinction average in first year.
- To rank you we take half of your UAI and half of your grade point average. Excellent grades in first year may overcome a lower UAI. We then take around 30 students.
Lol, trust me I can't wait to finish!wrong_turn said:oh snap, i asked this question....that long ago. and haha i gave up on the idea of transferring into law. now i just want to finish =P
It depends entirely on specifics: what subjects you've done, what subjects you want to do in your non-law component, how much credit for previous studies you get, etc etc. You'll be able to make a plan once you get your credit for previous studies application through (which you apply for after you accept your offer).pablito said:cheers. but im not transfering internally. im at a different university at the moment.
It really depends on how well things transfer over, my major wasn't too specific so it fit in quite well, so I will finish within 5 years, others I know had majors that didn't exist at MQ and had to take on a few subjects so it will take a bit longer, that said though you can speed it up with summer school and overloading if you wish.pablito said:if i succesfully externally transfer into a combined law degree at maq, is it possible to finish the degree in the usual 5 years?