^ agreed.
don't think law is honestly that different compared to other disciplines. read alot, read some more, talk in class, read the same thing again to actually get it, repeat.
the average law student is just a special breed, as mentioned above.
didn't really go deep into detinue and conversion till property law.
if it's anything like my torts course, save your energy to understand duty of care a few weeks for now *shudder*
also, chill. you're not the dumbest kid in your class ;)
To add to this excellent post, i'll give a perspective from an external applicant to UNSW Law.
I personally transferred at the start of this year (2014) from ANU with my Science/Economics course to UNSW Economics/Law.
The website cites admission for externals is considered under a 50/50...
T1 ECON2101 Microeconomics 2.................80 DN
T1 ECON2206 Introductory Econometrics........61 PS
T1 LAWS1052 Introducing Law & Justice........87 HD
T1 LAWS1141 Principles of Public Law.........75 DN
pretty happy, need to not totally ignore the economics side of the...
In terms of transferring, the answer is pretty much 50/50. I can't really think of a distinct advantage of one course over another for this purpose, you should get a full year of credit for both. Concerning getting the right marks to transfer, that's mostly up to you.
Um wow. Your domestic situation sounds pretty terrible :(.
Isn't there a way to combine the engineering or business degree at UWS with say a Bachelor of Arts so you could major in History or whatever while doing "professional studies" to please your parents and pretty much win both ways...
Spent the last two years at ANU myself.
If you're moving interstate to live on campus at ANU, you'll probably be in for a damn good time regardless of what course you do there. All of the residential communities are pretty awesome and the on campus lifestyle enables you to be "immersed" in...
l assume you'll have to do POLS1005 - Intro to IR at the very least (excellent course btw).
As for the other remaining course, some IR students do a language, others do the other first year politics course (POLS1002), others do something completely random.
If you want more guidance you can...
All good advice above.
To add one more point, l would still urge you to keep trying with maths in the case that you want to try CS/SE and choose a specific path like IT too quickly. Maths enables you think in logical ways no other subject in high school can really capture.
I would say to...