95%+ isn't high in UCAT among interview people. ATAR and UCAT both have a minimum cut-off. You must achieve above both cutoffs.AT LEAST? what about if you get like 98.8 or smthing but your ucat is high like more than 95 percentile
95%+ isn't high in UCAT among interview people. ATAR and UCAT both have a minimum cut-off. You must achieve above both cutoffs.AT LEAST? what about if you get like 98.8 or smthing but your ucat is high like more than 95 percentile
Isnât it a âtop downâ sorta thing so if you get the bare minimum of both cutoffs you might not get an interview?95%+ isn't high in UCAT among interview people. ATAR and UCAT both have a minimum cut-off. You must achieve above both cutoffs.
I doubt covid would change anything considering unsw med is the most competitive degree. If it did, it probably would still not drop below 99 for general applicantsI know, I was surprised too to find that the LOWEST non rural was 99.2 last year! Like what!
maybe due to COVID it may be marginally lower (98.8 might cut it)
Yeah wouldnât want people to get their hopes up, hence the use of âmayâ and âmarginallyâI doubt covid would change anything considering unsw med is the most competitive degree. If it did, it probably would still not drop below 99 for general applicants
they probably have a system of going top down, and last yr they ended up at those two scores.Isnât it a âtop downâ sorta thing so if you get the bare minimum of both cutoffs you might not get an interview?
The UCAT is seen as the first hurdle. You would need a certain percentile to get an interview; once you are invited, different medical schools have their own way of 'weighing' the interview score. For UNSW I believe it takes up 33% of the final score. Then they take the best 190 candidates. Saying that the 190 is made up of different types of candidates. Another example of it being arbitrary is Curtin where ATAR+UCAT+Interview is (40:20:40). But saying all of this, Covid-19 & Zoom interviews make it harder to guess the process of the selection. So a question like 'what my chances are in getting in?' is difficult to answer. I think anyone who wishes to apply must always have a 'Plan B', what to do if I don't get an offer. Also, I'm personally wary of 'Pre-med' courses offered by some universities but if anyone wishes to comment about 'Pre-med', please do so.Isnât it a âtop downâ sorta thing so if you get the bare minimum of both cutoffs you might not get an interview?
How do they deal with International students who wish to pursue medicine? Do they have to sit the UCAT as well, or are they just assessed based on their own country's relevant medical school exam?The UCAT is seen as the first hurdle. You would need a certain percentile to get an interview; once you are invited, different medical schools have their own way of 'weighing' the interview score. For UNSW I believe it takes up 33% of the final score. Then they take the best 190 candidates. Saying that the 190 is made up of different types of candidates. Another example of it being arbitrary is Curtin where ATAR+UCAT+Interview is (40:20:40). But saying all of this, Covid-19 & Zoom interviews make it harder to guess the process of the selection. So a question like 'what my chances are in getting in?' is difficult to answer. I think anyone who wishes to apply must always have a 'Plan B', what to do if I don't get an offer. Also, I'm personally wary of 'Pre-med' courses offered by some universities but if anyone wishes to comment about 'Pre-med', please do so.
They have to sit the UCAT as well, however out of the 190 I think there are 30 spots reserved for internationals only or something similar to that, Iâm not sure of the exact numberHow do they deal with International students who wish to pursue medicine? Do they have to sit the UCAT as well, or are they just assessed based on their own country's relevant medical school exam?
Pearson Vue delivers all kinds of tests including the UCAT ANZ & they are international. Some of the best scores come from students in India & Singapore which isn't surprising. Singaporeans sit for the Cambridge GCE A levels & taking a second language is compulsory over there. India has all-kinds of testing for government jobs, engineering etc. This is normal to them. Interested candidates then apply for the different medical schools with UCAT scores like what you do here. They are full-paying.How do they deal with International students who wish to pursue medicine? Do they have to sit the UCAT as well, or are they just assessed based on their own country's relevant medical school exam?
YesHave interviews for UWS medicine been released?
I believe it is first UCAT and ATAR that is considered (hence why their interviews are not released until january) and then the interview. Then the final stage is ucat atar and interview weighted in the 33% you mentioned. Definitely agree with you on the 'pre-med' route, it's (in my opinion) absolutely useless yet always drags people in who think it somehow gives them an advantage to gaining a career in medicine or excelling in the degree.The UCAT is seen as the first hurdle. You would need a certain percentile to get an interview; once you are invited, different medical schools have their own way of 'weighing' the interview score. For UNSW I believe it takes up 33% of the final score. Then they take the best 190 candidates. Saying that the 190 is made up of different types of candidates. Another example of it being arbitrary is Curtin where ATAR+UCAT+Interview is (40:20:40). But saying all of this, Covid-19 & Zoom interviews make it harder to guess the process of the selection. So a question like 'what my chances are in getting in?' is difficult to answer. I think anyone who wishes to apply must always have a 'Plan B', what to do if I don't get an offer. Also, I'm personally wary of 'Pre-med' courses offered by some universities but if anyone wishes to comment about 'Pre-med', please do so.
Medify and medentry are the main ones and I know people whoâve done extremely well with both or either. Beyond those two just go with what suits you in terms of price, platform etcWhat is the best ucat course, medify, medentry or ICanMed (fairly new but seems good). Can someone please let me know I'm thinking of starting the course right now so I can around 97-99 percentile
Oh but in all honesty I think you need maybe a year max of prep, it probably doesnt hurt to start early in year 10 or whatever grade youre in but itâs a little futile when many people get 95+ with less than a year prep but depends on youWhat is the best ucat course, medify, medentry or ICanMed (fairly new but seems good). Can someone please let me know I'm thinking of starting the course right now so I can around 97-99 percentile
Correct me if I'm wrong: more practice = better results especially for ucatOh but in all honesty I think you need maybe a year max of prep, it probably doesnt hurt to start early in year 10 or whatever grade youre in but itâs a little futile when many people get 95+ with less than a year prep but depends on you
logarithmic graph, but ye.Correct me if I'm wrong: more practice = better results especially for ucat
Still no matter how little it's still improvementlogarithmic graph, but ye.
I'm pretty sure for internationals, they're supposed to take the ISAT, not the UCAT. Also one year of med for internationals is like 70k so after 7 years, it's like half a million Australian dollars, enough to buy a house. How insane that is!Pearson Vue delivers all kinds of tests including the UCAT ANZ & they are international. Some of the best scores come from students in India & Singapore which isn't surprising. Singaporeans sit for the Cambridge GCE A levels & taking a second language is compulsory over there. India has all-kinds of testing for government jobs, engineering etc. This is normal to them. Interested candidates then apply for the different medical schools with UCAT scores like what you do here. They are full-paying.
Have you not heard of Bond University?I'm pretty sure for internationals, they're supposed to take the ISAT, not the UCAT. Also one year of med for internationals is like 70k so after 7 years, it's like half a million Australian dollars, enough to buy a house. How insane that is!
Apologies, internationals is the ISAT. Thank you.I'm pretty sure for internationals, they're supposed to take the ISAT, not the UCAT. Also one year of med for internationals is like 70k so after 7 years, it's like half a million Australian dollars, enough to buy a house. How insane that is!