Go work in a mid-tier firm and complete your CA.
Then look at masters. No one is really going to look seriously at a masters student with no practical experience.
Hi Guys
There used to be a couple of different masters degrees (i.e. MComm/MBus) which were studied concurrently with the ICAA or CPA programs (i.e. study both, get credit for ICAA/CPA units as they were studied and then finish with two quals.)
Are any of these run these days? I'm in...
Reading and summarising the textbook is definately the key. I for one found the lectures near useless, and thus didn't attend. Make sure you summarise some notes from the textbook which make sense to you, do some MCQ at the end of the chapter and then do the tests on the accompanying website...
Ah...you might just be right ;). The first semester is the Autumn session right, and the second one the Spring? Are the spring timetables finalised as well, as some of my units have no evening classes...difficult when working during the day.
Okay,
thanks everyone for their help so far! Another timetable question - for unit 200116 (Management Accounting Fundamentals) there is a "Practical" session. How does this differ from a tutorial. It seems like theres more and more sessions i have to attend!
On a totally different note (sorry for hijacking this thread), does anyone know if there are powerpoints inside the lecture/tutorial rooms - i.e. somewhere to plug a laptop in?
Simply said...Thanks!
Sorry, another question though, If a particular unit is offered at multiple campuses, i cannot attend it at whichever campus, just at my "home" (for lack of a better word) campus?
Tutorial/Lecture
Okay...site is back up, and i have found the times :)
However, do we attend both the tutorial and the lecture? I understand that the lecture is a large group, and the tutorial is a small group where you can present work and things?
Thanks :)
Timetable actual times
This is probably a stupid question...but on the timetable site it only has whether a unit is "evening" or "day". How do we find out the actual time it is on?
The "W" configuration refers to the fact that there are two (in this case, V8) engines bolted together and running along a common crankshaft. However, your shape analogy also has much merit :)
Guys (n girls of course)
Please, a show of hands of who is doing these new courses at UWS? I'd put a poll up, but there probably isnt that many people doing it.
*Hoping offers come on to UAC early*
-Malek