omg, someone else who buys starbursts everyday haha! :D
oh yes and to the OP i feel the same way. i feel like uni is impossible for me... being chronically sick and trying to get work done sucks big time. plus crap always seems to happen to me right around times when exams or assignments are...
Hey,
I can't imagine how hard that must be for you, doing the HSC must be a constant reminder of what happened and how much you miss her. Was she the girl of the news that year, the dancer? I really do think it would be a good idea for you to talk to someone, your school counsellor would...
that's so weird, it wouldnt be valid o.O
i did pathways & at the end of each year you get a HSC record of acheivement certificate with the course you've done so far, but your HSC is not complete until you've fullfilled 10 units of acheivement.
to join lifeline you need to do their training course and pass all of their requirements. even just doing the training course and having that on your resume is a good thing even if you dont end up doing the phone counselling, since it doesn't work out for everyone.
but kids help line doesn't...
Hey,
Of course you can do it, don't give up just yet :)
When you get back to school the first thing I'd suggest is that you go speak to your teachers, year advisor or principal about what can be done. Since you missed so much school and had a big disadvantage they should be able to do work...
Honestly, I really don't think it's a big deal at all. I know a girl who started uni last year and had only just turned 16 at the time, and it didn't bother anyone that she was younger. Apart from the fact that you can't go out clubbing if that's what your friends are into (none of mine are, so...
Okay, copied straight off the notes we got given yesterday in our pre-professional psych lecture yesterday. Academic psych's work for universities and conduct research, so I'm pretty sure that's what you mean.
What are the main roles of academic psychologists?
* Research and research...
To have enough documentation you would probably have had to be seeing a counsellor and your school would have had to have been made aware from the start you were having family difficulties over the past year. That's because you would need lots of documentation eg letters from a counsellor who...
My advice would be don't pressure her, and don't tell her what you think she "should" do. She's obviously already feeling really pressured and discouraged, and being pushed too much could make her want to do just the opposite of what everyone wants.
She might not be serious about dropping...
fill out the forms!!!
you sound so much like me last year "no i wont fill them out, it wont really make a difference anyway...it wont be enough.... yayaya" i completely refused at first. if i hadn't have listened to my teachers in the end, i would not be in university this year. trust me, i...
I'm sure! I did pathways, and then almost had to redo my subjects from last year again, so I had all that stuff explained :)
So basically, they calculate your UAI based on your newest results for a subject, so if you repeated something they'd use those marks.
They don't take an average of the 2 UAI's, they take the second one - regardless of whether it ends up being higher or lower than the first. You'd may as well do the exams this year, you never know how you might go!
I crammed a couple of days right before my exam and pulled almost-all-nighters. I still managed to go really well but I am not doing it this semester, I learnt my lesson and it's so not worth the stress and insanity.
I'll probably end up procrastinating all semester anyway, I almost wish I'd...
THREE years??? insanity much? :eek:
omg, she has no idea what she's in for haha, 2 years is already too much. is there any specific reason that means she has to do that, or is she just choosing it to try and get some perfect UAI?