I went to the chemistry bridging course last year because I dropped out of chemistry in year 12. They taught us pretty much everything on inorganic chemistry but didn't touch on organic. It was well worth it though, the lecturers were decent and the tutors were good and helpful. They also give...
IMO, I think UNSW has a modern city feel to it, USyd has a old English classical feel to it (due to the sandstone buildings). Generally speaking, UNSW probably caters a lot better than USyd as far as international students go, but the thing is that a large majority of those international...
hmm my password doesn't work :(
you'd probably find that numbers would be fairly consistent throughout unsw and usyd anyway, since they are both respected unis.
here's another: http://www.graduatecareers.com.au/content/view/full/24
I'm in first year.
I've been enjoying it so far. The workload isn't too bad, and with a bit of study, it's quite easy to do well (so far). The only subjects to watch out for in first year are statics and dynamics since they have a fairly high failure rate.
aye that's the course I'm currently doing :)
I guess your theory is right to an extent. Selective schools generally produce students with higher UAIs, and universities do favour people with higher UAIs ofcourse. So what you said is indirectly correct in a funny sort of way.
It's achievable, but you'll need to put a bit of work in. I'd say a credit (in uni) translates to about a band 5 (in hsc) in terms of workload required to achieve it.
It's a good choice because from what I know, biomedical is a sub-branch of mechanical engineering. Double degrees that go hand in hand are always good ;)
Tandy sells the non solar power version of it. Except, it is the newer model with the circle up the top instead of the two arrows (for the replay function).
The University of Sydney definitely has less asians than UNSW from what I've seen. I think that people like Gavrillo would certainly find a better environment at USyd.