I've got chem in the vet science conference centre which I'd never heard of til today. I've got another exam at the HK Ward gym. Those are my most exotic. Apart from that I'm at Maclaurin Hall and Carslaw.
hopefully it'll be like 1901 is now - buy the lecture notes and all that you do in lectures is go over them word by word. But that was probably only a one-off. There was really no point turning up to 1901 lectures.
I reckon you should only accelerate if you are VERY confident in the subject you accelerate in - ie if you are ready to do the exam ahead of time. If you will do better in that subject by waiting the extra year, you shouldn't really be accelerating, whatever the time constraints imposed upon you...
Well we get fairly lengthy holidays at the end of this year - very similar in length to the post-HSC holidays. This time, however, you need to retain all the info you've learnt over that period......
we had a maths matrices lecturer who studied and received her PhD at Princeton. She was really efficient at teaching, though the subject matter she taught was boring as hell.
That'd be right. You always wake up when there's a commotion in the room, which means you've either missed a prac or a funny moment. Then you're told to dose off again.
1.neurology
2.hematology
3.nephrology
4.immunology
Hmm, I've had my heart set on Immunology more than the other specialties to date, so I suppose it's kind of accurate.
what's wrong with chemistry? :eek:
Chem 1901 is kind of interesting, especially with Captain Kepert [lecturer Cameron Kepert] constantly carrying out experiments that either a.) simply don't work or b.) work so slowly that no-one cares once it's started. The most annoying thing is him...
I was seriously considering doing it again to better those average scores I got last year. Then I realised I couldn't be bothered to endure another UMAT.
I thought that that was the 3rd uni referred to. Well it's not really undergrad med, but a somewhat "glorified" version of graduate medicine - the main difference is that you get selected for grad med as an undergrad.