Hello,
I've gained a fair amount of interest for MxFac Surgery. In Australia, I believe that MxFac training requires both the Dentistry and Medicine degree as prereqs.
I guess I will have to attempt to get into Medicine.
Now, my problem is the GPA.
My high school friends are all trashing Biomed sci with kick ass GPAs (even though they study less hours than I do); they all achieve above the required GPA 5.5.
In Dent, I'm struggling to keep my 5.0! Only less than 10% of students actually make it pass the 5.5 (4 students!). We've had over 15% of the initial intake fail during 1st and 2nd year.
From 55 students, third year is down to 42 (or less).
While I do not know for sure that Dent is harder than Biomed, I do know that not all courses have the same difficulty; is this considered by Unis?
Or is the minimum 5.5 SET. Meaning, a science degree requiring an ENTER of 80.00 is just as equally weighted as...Dent which required an ENTER 99.3 (2009).
Again, I'm not arguing that a higher ENTER necessarily means a tougher degree, but in general, it does seem to follow that trend somewhat.
I can't even consider MxFac surgery until I have both degrees in my hand! Bummer.
I've gained a fair amount of interest for MxFac Surgery. In Australia, I believe that MxFac training requires both the Dentistry and Medicine degree as prereqs.
I guess I will have to attempt to get into Medicine.
Now, my problem is the GPA.
My high school friends are all trashing Biomed sci with kick ass GPAs (even though they study less hours than I do); they all achieve above the required GPA 5.5.
In Dent, I'm struggling to keep my 5.0! Only less than 10% of students actually make it pass the 5.5 (4 students!). We've had over 15% of the initial intake fail during 1st and 2nd year.
From 55 students, third year is down to 42 (or less).
While I do not know for sure that Dent is harder than Biomed, I do know that not all courses have the same difficulty; is this considered by Unis?
Or is the minimum 5.5 SET. Meaning, a science degree requiring an ENTER of 80.00 is just as equally weighted as...Dent which required an ENTER 99.3 (2009).
Again, I'm not arguing that a higher ENTER necessarily means a tougher degree, but in general, it does seem to follow that trend somewhat.
I can't even consider MxFac surgery until I have both degrees in my hand! Bummer.