CheeseHelpLine
Member
- Joined
- May 26, 2007
- Messages
- 159
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
more or less?
more stressful i assume?
more stressful i assume?
for me about as easy it is to get around uai of 89
lol thanks i think?
Yep. Having to be self-reliant and self-motivated is definitely one of the greatest differences.I have started uni yet either (2008 HSC) but i can still notice certain things.
Well firstly you need to be self reliant, the amount of work you put in is completely up to you. It isn't like highschool where they practically spoon feed you everything and encourage you to do work earlier etc. Time management will be the hardest thing to adjust to. Lot's of self research time work may need to be required to gain high marks. What i suggest doing is to try really really hard the first semester and see what kind of marks you get. Then judge how hard you have to work from then, taking into account units get progressively harder throughout the course.
Yeah. The mentors told me to try and get a GPA ~ 4 in the earlier units because they are the easiest in the course. It's obviously really hard to improve your GPA later on because of the whole average thing and the large sample size.Yep. Having to be self-reliant and self-motivated is definitely one of the greatest differences.
And that is good advice (about working very hard the first semester and see how you go from there). In the first semester you learn how to do essays/reports in a new style so it is beneficial to put a lot of work into your first assessments and get it right the first time - it makes essays/reports afterwards much easier once you get the first one right.
you havn't started uni yet. LOL. thats like me telling a girl how to put makeup on because ive read about it.I have started uni yet either (2008 HSC) but i can still notice certain things.
Well firstly you need to be self reliant, the amount of work you put in is completely up to you. It isn't like highschool where they practically spoon feed you everything and encourage you to do work earlier etc. Time management will be the hardest thing to adjust to. Lot's of self research time work may need to be required to gain high marks. What i suggest doing is to try really really hard the first semester and see what kind of marks you get. Then judge how hard you have to work from then, taking into account units get progressively harder throughout the course.
Like everyone is saying it is completely dependant on what course you do. Like i'm doing BAppFin with BComAcst and by the looks of it it's going to get very difficult. I don't really care though because i'm willing to try harder as it is something i really want to do, not just random crap subjects i'm practically forced to do to have enough units for the hsc
courses may be easier, but competition for higher marks is lower. So basically thats a load of shit.Yeah. The mentors told me to try and get a GPA ~ 4 in the earlier units because they are the easiest in the course. It's obviously really hard to improve your GPA later on because of the whole average thing and the large sample size.
Just because i haven't started uni yet it doesn't mean i can't answer the majority of questions from other peoples past experiences (mentors, friends etc). Especially with the majority of HSC08 questions being like, "Where should i sit in a lecture?" or "Is Uni hard?"Uni = better atmosphere than high school
workload for business type courses= less than high school
competition for TOP marks= more than high school.
you havn't started uni yet. LOL. thats like me telling a girl how to put makeup on because ive read about it.
unreliable/bias information?Just because i haven't started uni yet it doesn't mean i can't answer the majority of questions from other peoples past experiences (mentors, friends etc). Especially with the majority of HSC08 questions being like, "Where should i sit in a lecture?" or "Is Uni hard?"
I'm sure that in most situations someone doing a hardcore maths based engineering degree double is going to fail massively in the most basic of Arts courses, and vice versa.Hahahahaha no definitely not thanks.
Depends what course you do at Uni I guess...? I mean if you do Bachelor of Arts it really shouldn't be much work compared to like some uber combined hardcore degree...?
Workload wise, high school is nothing compared to university. You're effectively doing the 2 years of HSC every semester in terms of content.
*claps*I disagree asylum, im finding the workload at uni to be less and in smaller blocks than it was for the HSC.
edit: im doing a double degree EFS faculty.
well EFS degrees are nothing. only so few contact hours and a bit of homework.I disagree asylum, im finding the workload at uni to be less and in smaller blocks than it was for the HSC.
edit: im doing a double degree EFS faculty.