Tiffanys
Executed member
Is Macquarie ever going to start a Medicine program? PLEAAAAASE START ONE! By 2009!
The Australian School of Advanced Medicine is modelled on the Mayo Clinic principle of excellence in health care, combining clinical practice and teachjng with research.
Your sig is old! Laptop lounge anyone?!lcf said:I noticed they like 'teachjng' - just to be random, I emailed the new Dean to tell him - buwhahaha holiday randomness:
http://www.medicine.mq.edu.au/perspective.html
It's vintage!PwarYuex said:Your sig is old! Laptop lounge anyone?!
Nah, that building is vintage; your sig is old.lcf said:It's vintage!
Yeah... I think that's pretty much what's been said in the thread so far?LottoX said:Didn't they announce that they'd be doing specialist training and not undergrad?
EDIT: Looking at that link... "sub-specialty"; that seems pretty far away from a general undergrad program to me.
The uni does offer the LLB for graduates, but only part-time external.PwarYuex said:Then again, you'd hope that they'd offer grad law soon, but that will never happen...
Er... Do you actually understand what a JD is?GoodToGo said:As for post-grad law, it'd be a terrible move for a second tier law school like MQ to offer a JD in the forseeable future.
That's because they're trying to be like the US.I think Melbourne and Bond are the only a uni's to offer it, and only Melbourne offer it at the exclusion of the LLB.
:rofl: I really, really, really, really doubt that USyd or UNSW are going to cut out law UG law, mate... If they wanted to, do you think there would be a push in the opposite direction; namely a single LLB degree available for school leavers (like UTS)?I'm sure Sydney or UNSW will be next.
Agreed (if you mean post-grad law). MQ does post-grad degrees focused on specialty areas, namely environment. But yes, it is by no means 'proper'.PwarYuex said:I'm saying they should offer a proper grad degree, like most other unis in Sydney.
Personally, I think it's only a matter of time before popular professional degrees, such as law, head down the graduate route (especially after the first lot of Melbourne JD students enter the workforce). It might not even be in the next 10 years, but USYD and UNSW would be the most likely law schools in Australia to make the switch out of the all the unis.PwarYuex said:I really, really, really, really doubt that USyd or UNSW are going to cut out law UG law, mate... If they wanted to, do you think there would be a push in the opposite direction; namely a single LLB degree available for school leavers (like UTS)?
Monash University also offers the JD.GoodToGo said:I think Melbourne and Bond are the only a uni's to offer it
No. Does that matter, though? Maybe if I had relatives who were earning blah blah blah {typical wannabe MQ law snobbery} my opinion would matter? :rofl:GoodToGo said:You seem to be very opinionated in this area. Are you a law student?
No, I generally mean what I say: Macquarie has post grad law! MQ hasn't got a proper grad law -- how many times do I have to say it?! They have a really really shit external part-time degree. Hence, not a proper grad degree, k? The fact that they cbf organising a grad degree is pretty indicative. Then again, the shit UG degrees are pretty indicative of it, too...(blah blah typical MQ law student wanking bullshit)
So either you have NFI what you're talking about or you meant to say post-grad.
Nah. Otherwise there wouldn't be a big push in the Sydney unis (like has been sucessful in UTS) to have a single UG law degree.Personally, I think it's only a matter of time before popular professional degrees, such as law, head down the graduate route (especially after the first lot of Melbourne JD students enter the workforce). It might not even be in the next 10 years, but USYD and UNSW would be the most likely law schools in Australia to make the switch out of the all the unis.
Haha, chill dude. I was just asking as it sounded like you may have been a student from your post but I didn't recall you posting too much on law before. Apparently merely mentioning a starting salary as the next step upon completion of 7 years of college in America equates to "typical wannabe MQ law snobbery". Personally, I don't intend to enter private practice (and that's the same for at least half mq law grads).PwarYuex said:No. Does that matter, though? Maybe if I had relatives who were earning blah blah blah {typical wannabe MQ law snobbery} my opinion would matter? :rofl:
It looks a lot like a way to score large amounts of cash from people who want a few more letters after their name. I'm suprised that they couldn't just learn advanced surgical skills on the job (as is already done) - isn't it enough to be a fellow of the royal australasian college of surgeons? I really hope that it doesn't catch on.This program is for surgeons who have a specialist qualification as a surgeon who wish to acquire a university qualification which signals mastery of additional skills and competencies in a sub-specialty.
Haha, honours student with no time.Cyan_phoeniX said:So, hey, apparently they are starting medicing at macquarie? *points to thread topic*
Apparently it's quite common for surgeons in this area to go overseas? Apparently there's a need for it. This is according to an MQ PR article, so it may be biased.KFunk said:Those postgrad macquarie medicine programs are quite curious. I'm not quite sure what their use is:
It looks a lot like a way to score large amounts of cash from people who want a few more letters after their name. I'm suprised that they couldn't just learn advanced surgical skills on the job (as is already done) - isn't it enough to be a fellow of the royal australasian college of surgeons? I really hope that it doesn't catch on.