Thanks Joel. That was a good and straight forward summary. Although, again, the range is so wide, I still have no idea. Biotech sounds good, as does the last couple you mentioned that lead to hospital jobs.
I see you're doing Science at the moment. How are you enjoying it? Also, are maths and physics required courses, or did you choose them because you liked them?
I did maths and physics because I enjoy them! With science I loved chemistry and biology, but, I made the mistake of not doing bio 3/4 in year 11 so my biology knowledge is quite restricted. I also love chemistry probably just as much as physics but I had no room for chemistry at uni and I was always stronger at physics than chemistry so I chose to do physics, whilst also experimenting with engineering to see if applying science to creating new things would interest me.
At the moment I'm considering majoring in either maths, physics, mechanical engineering or electrical engineering (chemical if I could somehow do chemistry on the side). At uni the difficulty level has jumped up a fair bit, so the work definately isn't easy. People interested in most biology things may need to do a first year maths subject (i.e. calculus 1 and statistics), but, if your wanting to do a technology subject doing some form of physics and more maths may be needed.
With physics and maths the two have never seemed to be a chore to do, rather a hobby! Well I did advanced physics and a mid level maths so maths has been fine and physics was intense (so I'm going back to standard physics). My adviced is if you are passionate about something so much don't not considering studying it whilst having other areas open. With me working on technology, maths problems or even with radiation seems less yuck than dissecting an animal (My weakness in biology).