i've heard some people say that there are 'back door' ways to get into a bachelor of medicine apart from ATAR.
i know about the interviews and umat but atar is still considered
what are some of these other ways
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If medicine is such a passion you should have started researching a while ago.how to get into medicine aside from an amazing atar ???
i've wanted to do medicine since like eva but am not sure i will get the atar i need so any advice on how i can still become a doctor
thanks guys
u serious??? WOW there are heaps of interstaters that ive met, THEY MUST BE FUCKING GUN!!!i don't think there's any easy way into medicine or any back doors for that matter. you will have to sit the UMAT/GAMSAT no matter what and chances are unless you're rural you will need a pretty high score depending on your performance in an interview + ATAR score. that being said, if you don't have the capacity to get a decent ATAR score (assuming you aren't handicapped) then i really don't see how you can make it through medicine... i know getting in is considered quite difficult but imo it's the EASIEST part of your medical career.
as for whether you'll need a high ATAR... on the whole yes (unless you're rural). at most universities that take ATAR into their final selection for offers you will need at least 99 for an unbonded offer (bonded sucks btw, the scheme was made considerably worse in 2010). However, UNCLE and UWS only use the ATAR as a hurdle (you'll need about 95, once you pass that it won't have any effect on the selection process). that being said, UWS generally has a very high UMAT requirement to be selected for an interview (even for GWS residents the UMAT is still in the mid 80%iles). UNCLE this year required a UMAT of only around 175 and once you reached that it was 100% interview.
in order to be eligible for griffith, UTAS and UQ you will need 50 raw score in EACH SECTION (these universities are a little different to the others). no exceptions. this is why their UMAT scores are generally lower than other unis (low 170's i believe). the 50 raw score in each section culls a huge number of applicants but as for whether it's harder to get into these unis than regular unis... that's up to the individual.
oh and if you're not from tasmania, the cutoff for interstaters is extremely high (~215 raw?) so.... yeah.
nonstandard interstaters aren't discriminated against. chances are they are non standard (only requires a UMAT in the mid 80 percentile IIRC)u serious??? WOW there are heaps of interstaters that ive met, THEY MUST BE FUCKING GUN!!!
Very true.Medicine is soft compared to engineering in terms of workload
Actually, I've been told by a few of my med friends and mentors that getting in is pretty much the hardest part.i don't think there's any easy way into medicine or any back doors for that matter. you will have to sit the UMAT/GAMSAT no matter what and chances are unless you're rural you will need a pretty high score depending on your performance in an interview + ATAR score. that being said, if you don't have the capacity to get a decent ATAR score (assuming you aren't handicapped) then i really don't see how you can make it through medicine... i know getting in is considered quite difficult but imo it's the EASIEST part of your medical career.
^^Yeah.Medicine is soft compared to engineering in terms of workload
I have a cousin doing med (3rd year possibly) and he says its not that tough. I don't know anyone who thinks engineering is easy and yes i think it spans across all disciplinesActually, I've been told by a few of my med friends and mentors that getting in is pretty much the hardest part.
^^Yeah.
People tend to put medicine on this pedestal of impossibility, but from what I've gathered you just need to put in a solid, consistent effort... it's doable for shizzle.
I never knew Engineering had such a big workload? Is that only some types of Engineering degrees, or does that span across all types?
i wasn't just talking about the workload at university, i was talking about stresses in the career as a whole.Actually, I've been told by a few of my med friends and mentors that getting in is pretty much the hardest part.
^^Yeah.
People tend to put medicine on this pedestal of impossibility, but from what I've gathered you just need to put in a solid, consistent effort... it's doable for shizzle.
I never knew Engineering had such a big workload? Is that only some types of Engineering degrees, or does that span across all types?
Heaps of stress hay.i wasn't just talking about the workload at university, i was talking about stresses in the career as a whole.
but personally i found getting in to be relatively easy compared to the med workload at university.
lol, that's terrible advice! don't you think it's worth a bit of effort to pursue a career you enjoy and are intellectually capable of?dont become a doctor, choose IT or something else. Its lotsa hard work and sacrifice for about 12-13 years from year 1 med school till specialist qualifications.
Finished 6 years med school, 2 years basic, and 5 years more training left, still earning less than a nurse my age..
^^definitelyMedicine is soft compared to engineering in terms of workload