Originally posted by Lazarus
Interesting... a friend of mine (female arts/law student) tried to overload in her second session and they wouldn't let her. She had a UAI of 99.70 and all distinctions or better from her first semester.
Guess they're as consistent as always.
Consistency is within schools/faculties, not across them. For example, the overload policies for some faculties/schools (to my knowledge) at the moment are:
- Law - not in first year. After that talk about it, and talk to the people running the other half of your program too (I gather that's meant to be the gist of it).
- Commerce - only in final year, and then only if necessary, is the nominal policy. I know someone who managed to overload in first year because he sent a (very long) error message through NSS rather than talking to the faculty directly. He says it was roughly 3 A4 pages of detail. And that's why they let him do Psych 1B
- Science - not sure. Individual schools tend to merge it with their Talented Students Programs (physics and chemistry in particular) but I know maths will allow some overload, and I'm told computer science will as well.
- CSE is supposed to allow some overload. I've only heard of it, rather than meeting someone who's done it, though.
- Med - I can't see this as feasible. The first couple of years are structured enough that med timetables are simply done year by year, so the chances of subjects for first years and second years not clashing are slim to none. After that hospital work would take up quite a bit of time, I guess.
The science one in particular could be out of date, and you'd probably know about the law one better than I would, Laz.