XXXPUMPERXXX
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I am able to get in either bachelor of engineering/science or bachelor of engineering/adv.sci. Is there any reason I should choose adv.sci over normal sci the only difference I see is the honours year.
It depends what is the purpose of the science degree for you? Is the engineering the main degree you hope to pursue a career in?I am able to get in either bachelor of engineering/science or bachelor of engineering/adv.sci. Is there any reason I should choose adv.sci over normal sci the only difference I see is the honours year.
I will be doing quantum engineering and physics and I wish to do research in applied physics later on. I talked with a researcher who did a phd in theoretical physics who had a undergraduate in electrical engineering/physics double major and he told me that because he completed a double major he was able to do his honours in a field where electrical engineering and physics research overlapped. So I thought I would be shaving off a year from my degree If I did something like this ? Also can't I just add on a honours year after I graduate if I want ?It depends what is the purpose of the science degree for you? Is the engineering the main degree you hope to pursue a career in?
If the engineering is the area you want to get a job in then honours for science degree isn't necessary and you should do the honours in the engineering instead. However, if you plan to do a career related to science or you want broaden your job opportunities do the advanced science because the honours year is quite important.
Particularly for entry into any masters or phd degrees where you are assessed not off the year 1-3 of the science degree but rather your class (mark) in the honours year
Honours is where you actually learn lab skills properly since you use proper equipment used in an industry and research setting vs the simple 2-3 hour experiments in the earlier years where it is basically like following a recipe where you have a method
It might be possible to do that but I can't say specifically. You should talk directly to the faculty head / contact if that is a possibility. No you can't graduate and then do the honours, it's in built into the degree. If you want do something like an honours after that degree is complete that would be a masters but for this in UNSW you need to have done honours to be eligible for the government scholarship because otherwise its way too expensive to fund yourself might be like 50k a yearI will be doing quantum engineering and physics and I wish to do research in applied physics later on. I talked with a researcher who did a phd in theoretical physics who had a undergraduate in electrical engineering/physics double major and he told me that because he completed a double major he was able to do his honours in a field where electrical engineering and physics research overlapped. So I thought I would be shaving off a year from my degree If I did something like this ? Also can't I just add on a honours year after I graduate if I want ?
So yes you can apply for this and it's not in built, but it's not like as you said before with you graduate and then you do it later. You would have to apply for that sometime towards the end of the 3rd year of the science portion of your degree. So you apply while you are a student still rather than completed the 3 years science degree and then applying after that.https://www.unsw.edu.au/study/undergraduate/bachelor-of-science-honours?studentType=Domestic this honours I found isn't in built and in admission requirements it says that students who have completed a bachelor of science with a greater than %65 wam can apply for this. I am confused