randomunswmedstudent
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2015
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- HSC
- 2009
Was browsing this since I was feeling nostalgic about my year 12. I am a final year medical student at UNSW, and I'll give my honest opinion here: I emphasise I am generalising, but generalisations are to some extent founded on truth, and I reflect merely what I see on a day to day basis.
First what is good about UNSW? Nothing much really, the teaching can be lousy, there's not enough support, the people in medsoc are a bunch of stuck up pricks... but we work fucking hard, and have a course that is actually becoming reasonably tolerable.
To start, there are two parts to being a doctor, first is the basic sciences, second is practical art: you MUST know the basic sciences (eg anatomy, physiology etc), and you must be able to talk to your patients and confidently perform an examination/do simple procedures on them. The former of these you learn from textbooks, wikipedia (lol) and other resources, the latter, you practice on friends and family, and on real patients in hospital.
Now, the main difference between UWS and UNSW is the balance of these two. UWS places more emphasis on the latter, UNSW more on the former, which means that UWS students are more liked by doctors in hospital (hence why so many people say UWS has a better course?), but UNSW students a have much firmer grounding in the basic sciences (before you hate, I challenge any UWS student to do the 2004 AMC handbook and see if they can score above 50%). Both are important, but the basic sciences are more important if you want anywhere as a specialist: what separates a GP from a specialist is the degree of understanding of the basic sciences, and how to apply them to a clinical setting.
So, if you want to specialise, UNSW's basic sciences is pretty good, and it will help quite a bit in your post-grad training; BUT if you want to be a GP, then it doesnt matter which Uni you go to. I EMPHASISE this: if you know the theory inside out, you can always work out the clinical side; but you can never work out the basic sciences from the clinical side of things. Which is harder? I would say the basic sciences by far. Of course, you can suffer now or later, but bear in mind, you'll be competing with the stupid number of medical graduates that have more than doubled since 1999 to get into specialist programs (all you surgeon wannabes? in 2014 about 1000 doctors [for simplicity, out of a cohort of approx 2500 students who graduated in 2010?] competed for about 300 slots in all surgical disciplines; the competition is only getting worse, this year there are about 4500 medical students).
Which brings us to the MD vs MBBS debate and how this matters. Most specialties used a 'structured online CV' which gives points based on your qualifications, research, co-curricular activities etc. The MD is worth slightly more points than the MBBS so keep this in mind you you're aiming to get into these specialties. And the compulsory research year at UNSW? It's a hit or miss thing, but I can honestly say that because of that research year, I've maxed out the points you can get for doing research for most specialist programs, which has implications for my future career choices (4 journal articles, impact factor 7.3, 3.5, 1.7, 1.5; 2 conference proceedings at relatively prestigious international meetings [one was the RCOG/RANZCOG meeting in Queensland this year]). However, if you're confident you can get the points from elsewhere, by all means, go ahead. Just bear in mind there is an advantage to the UNSW research year (if you don't waste your time messing around).
Is UNSW more prestigious. Yes. Does this matter? Yes. My research was allowed by virtue of the fact I got to know professors, and professors are affiliated with universities. UNSW has far more professors given its more intensive research focus. I guess you could do research later on, but when you're studying your ass off again for specialty exams, you'd be hard pressed to find the time.
So if I had to pick again, between a 5 year course or the UNSW course, I would choose UNSW again because I know I don't want to be a GP. I'm not too scared about the practical sides of things since I've learnt enough to be ok-ish on the ward (and that stuff is easily learnt as an intern), but for the basic sciences I know and research I've conducted/participated in, it was definitely worth it.
First what is good about UNSW? Nothing much really, the teaching can be lousy, there's not enough support, the people in medsoc are a bunch of stuck up pricks... but we work fucking hard, and have a course that is actually becoming reasonably tolerable.
To start, there are two parts to being a doctor, first is the basic sciences, second is practical art: you MUST know the basic sciences (eg anatomy, physiology etc), and you must be able to talk to your patients and confidently perform an examination/do simple procedures on them. The former of these you learn from textbooks, wikipedia (lol) and other resources, the latter, you practice on friends and family, and on real patients in hospital.
Now, the main difference between UWS and UNSW is the balance of these two. UWS places more emphasis on the latter, UNSW more on the former, which means that UWS students are more liked by doctors in hospital (hence why so many people say UWS has a better course?), but UNSW students a have much firmer grounding in the basic sciences (before you hate, I challenge any UWS student to do the 2004 AMC handbook and see if they can score above 50%). Both are important, but the basic sciences are more important if you want anywhere as a specialist: what separates a GP from a specialist is the degree of understanding of the basic sciences, and how to apply them to a clinical setting.
So, if you want to specialise, UNSW's basic sciences is pretty good, and it will help quite a bit in your post-grad training; BUT if you want to be a GP, then it doesnt matter which Uni you go to. I EMPHASISE this: if you know the theory inside out, you can always work out the clinical side; but you can never work out the basic sciences from the clinical side of things. Which is harder? I would say the basic sciences by far. Of course, you can suffer now or later, but bear in mind, you'll be competing with the stupid number of medical graduates that have more than doubled since 1999 to get into specialist programs (all you surgeon wannabes? in 2014 about 1000 doctors [for simplicity, out of a cohort of approx 2500 students who graduated in 2010?] competed for about 300 slots in all surgical disciplines; the competition is only getting worse, this year there are about 4500 medical students).
Which brings us to the MD vs MBBS debate and how this matters. Most specialties used a 'structured online CV' which gives points based on your qualifications, research, co-curricular activities etc. The MD is worth slightly more points than the MBBS so keep this in mind you you're aiming to get into these specialties. And the compulsory research year at UNSW? It's a hit or miss thing, but I can honestly say that because of that research year, I've maxed out the points you can get for doing research for most specialist programs, which has implications for my future career choices (4 journal articles, impact factor 7.3, 3.5, 1.7, 1.5; 2 conference proceedings at relatively prestigious international meetings [one was the RCOG/RANZCOG meeting in Queensland this year]). However, if you're confident you can get the points from elsewhere, by all means, go ahead. Just bear in mind there is an advantage to the UNSW research year (if you don't waste your time messing around).
Is UNSW more prestigious. Yes. Does this matter? Yes. My research was allowed by virtue of the fact I got to know professors, and professors are affiliated with universities. UNSW has far more professors given its more intensive research focus. I guess you could do research later on, but when you're studying your ass off again for specialty exams, you'd be hard pressed to find the time.
So if I had to pick again, between a 5 year course or the UNSW course, I would choose UNSW again because I know I don't want to be a GP. I'm not too scared about the practical sides of things since I've learnt enough to be ok-ish on the ward (and that stuff is easily learnt as an intern), but for the basic sciences I know and research I've conducted/participated in, it was definitely worth it.
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