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Hi Ashtor,ashtor said:Whats wrong with this course? Everyone's been telling me not to do it as commerce/law has more employment oppurtunities and more money. Is this true? What can you become with this degree anyway?
"YIKES!Suvat said:Also 28 hours/week instead of 17...
absolution* said:Geeez, i feel sorry for those people. At least theyll earn shitloads when their done though.
as opposed to other particular varieties..1000words said:You needn't feel sorry for engineering/law students/graduates - from those I know, they enjoy it immensely and the hours are not bad. It's significantly longer when you compare it to a 17 hour/week workload but they would not trade it for anything else. Engineering/law students are also less known to go through the course for the money so they hold a genuine interest for the course and are more satisfied throughout university as a result.
MoonlightSonata said:as opposed to other particular varieties..
After a week? It's pretty difficult to tell whether you feel comfortable with the workload in the first week, particularly as the first few weeks are very much introductory.ashtor said:shit! 28 hours..........say i pick this course first if i get accepted and i don't like it, can I transfer to commerce after a week or am i stuck for the year?
Why did they say that? There are always employment opportunities in fields of technological innovation, particularly with biomedical engineering when there's a lot of commercial incentive in that area.ashtor said:are there many jobs in biomedical engineering because that's what I'm interested in. Someone that done the course said to stay away from it...
What options are you thinking of taking with a biomedical engineering background that does not involve research? I was under the impression that it was a high-demand area. You may need to probe this person further and whether they speak from personal experience, and if so, what specifically. This is important to take advice in its context.ashtor said:they said that in australia, occupation was very limited and most people wind up doing research, and i dont want to go overseas
I am not sure whether law necessarily helps research skills. I am sure there are some similarities (i.e. they're not exclusive) but not so straightforward. On the same token, I am not sure whether engineering necessarily helps legal skills. It's up to the individual, I think, and not the disciplines in general.mr EaZy said:do u wanna do research?
does law help research skills? does law help engineering skills? or are they exlusive?
Im sure that enginnerring helps law skills (in thinking terms), can anyone confirm this?
if u do get a job with a biomed company, ull probably be high up i reckon, with ur law degree
thats all