Sorry if these questions have been asked before. I have tried Googling and also searching these forums, but I couldn't find anything.
I'm thinking of transferring from UTS to USyd (or maybe UNSW) because of the variety and flexibility of subjects available. UTS degrees are all really inflexible - you have to know exactly what you want to study, which I do not.
Am I missing something, or are the USyd handbooks an absolute trainwreck? Even with the new CUSP system, it's very difficult to find detailed information about subjects. Also, am I right in thinking that you can't view any timetables until after you have enrolled?
My main issue is with the assessments for some units in the science and IT faculties. A lot seem to have exams weighted as high as 70%. I have ADHD and get pretty bad exam anxiety, so this is way too much pressure for me.
> What is the grading like on exams. If you do really well in the coursework but poorly on the exam (as a result of time management - not just straight up getting everything wrong) do you generally find that your overall mark turns out pretty good?
> Do any math/CS/IT/science units allow you to bring notes or "cheat sheets" into exams? Or is it the traditional (horribly outdated) closed-book 3-hour exam?
Please mention specific units in responses
I'm thinking of transferring from UTS to USyd (or maybe UNSW) because of the variety and flexibility of subjects available. UTS degrees are all really inflexible - you have to know exactly what you want to study, which I do not.
Am I missing something, or are the USyd handbooks an absolute trainwreck? Even with the new CUSP system, it's very difficult to find detailed information about subjects. Also, am I right in thinking that you can't view any timetables until after you have enrolled?
My main issue is with the assessments for some units in the science and IT faculties. A lot seem to have exams weighted as high as 70%. I have ADHD and get pretty bad exam anxiety, so this is way too much pressure for me.
> What is the grading like on exams. If you do really well in the coursework but poorly on the exam (as a result of time management - not just straight up getting everything wrong) do you generally find that your overall mark turns out pretty good?
> Do any math/CS/IT/science units allow you to bring notes or "cheat sheets" into exams? Or is it the traditional (horribly outdated) closed-book 3-hour exam?
Please mention specific units in responses