Charizard
Member
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2008
- Messages
- 701
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
Don't even get started.Forbidden. said:
we've all seen photos of you. If i was you i would have killed myself by now.
Don't even get started.Forbidden. said:
sunjet said:fuck you're a tool. who the fuck are you?
I survived.Charizard said:Don't even get started.
we've all seen photos of you. If i was you i would have killed myself by now.
you seem to have a knack for failing.Forbidden. said:I survived.
Nope, I need to attend some safety or precautionary thing for materials but don't know exactly when.-Anfernee- said:Do you think it will be as big as semester 1 O -week?
HeLLo, iF yOU cAn JoIn tHe CHanNeL #ban aT irc.myg0t.com WiThOuT BeINg BaNNeD CoMe BaCK oTHERwISE LOLCharizard said:you seem to have a knack for failing.
it's not o-week like the start of year o-weekForbidden. said:I wonder what Semester 2 O-week would be like.
i'll say it again. When you bash commerce or whatever flavour of the month course that you have just transferred from, you do so with blanket statements for the degree. Yet you always seem reference only UNSW as if this is the only place the degree's are taught. Just because it is shit at your uni doesn't necessarily mean it's the same ta other university's.politik said:When you've attained more than a semester's worth of University study you'll know that Economics is a humanities specialisation. UNSW is one of the few universities around that offers a straight BEc, most overseas institutions offer Economics as a program within a BArts. A BArts is a prestigious qualification - despite its low UAI and pitiful funding at UNSW.
Finance is only one major from a choice of many, it does not equal the whole course. I can't imagine to many maths graduates are taking commerce jobs in areas of marketing, management, HR, commercial law, some areas of economics, and any other major i cbf thinking of atm.Really? Is that why Pure Mathematics students are filling spots reserved for Finance Graduands, Actuarial Graduands, and general Commerce grads? I think superior knowledge in the sciences is better than memorising precise theorems (as is the case in BComm).
Why? Because a year out from your degree, new methodologies will prop up. The Australian School of Business doesn't prepare you to tackle upcoming algorithms, it trains you in current ones. The reason why an Engineering degree in Computing at UNSW is much more highly valued than an IT degree from UTS is because the UNSW Engineering faculty trains students in general skills and problem-solving logic. They cannot predict what technologies will prop up tomorrow, and hence ensure students are well prepared for what will change, not what is currently the norm.
'Better' meaning those with higher UAI scores? The HSC proves nothing about a students talent - it rewards those with proficiency in retaining information at examination time, nothing more. That's why faculties now evaluate other facets of a student to determine proficiency.
Ye true, i would hate it if my degree just consisted of straight programming, even though i study info tech i wouldn't want a career in programming.politik said:UOW is a very well renowned university - I know little about its IT degree. But what's the point in learning programming, when you can learn how to be an engineer? UNSW doesn't bother with learning certain languages or straight programming - anyone can program. It teaches you to concoct solutions to problems - any Turing-complete language is fine.
My example references UTS, as it teaches its students straight 'programming'.
I dont agree with the 'high uai' = smart. I know many people with low uai's that got into uni and are very very good at it. So i reckon it is the performance at uni that reflects intelligence, not high school. But also i personally see anyone that finishes uni to be intelligent , its not easy surviving uni.charizard said:Sounds like what the kids who got low uai's used to say. The system isn't perfect, but i don't know anyone who i would consider to be an intelligent person who didn't get a relatively high uai, or many who were rather dull that got high uai's.
To be honest the rote learn method used by most successful students in the HSC can just as easily be applied to some university courses to get a decent mark. Where do you draw the line as to what constitutes talent ?.
I don't think you would be so cavalier about bashing the Commerce degree if you had been able to get into it in the first place. The thing is, the Economics degree at UNSW is used as a stepping stone for most students that didn't meet the cut-off for Commerce.That is, students transfer out of Economics into Commerce if they are elgible and not the other way around. Are you seriously trying to imply that people would choose it ahead of Commerce had they had that luxury of choice? I don't think so.politik said:You can't seem to follow a straight thread of consciousness - your argument is filled with errors and the little you can argue comes to down erroneous comment as bolded.
Computer Science has little to do with keyboards - proving that you're an ignorant fuck. I'll be able to make headway into fields as innovative as AI, Parallel Computing, Cluster Congruence, etc - you'll be fiddling with Bank Reconciliation forms and a faux form of Psychology coined 'Management Accounting'.
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Great post.Conspirocy said:I'm really sick of the whole engineering v commerce argument that keeps happening. The only reason it happens is because most of the commerce people got higher UAI's and so they think they are smarter. Engineers on the other hand think that they have to do more work at uni and that they have a harder course. Then you add the fact that some people with extremely high UAI’s go into engineering, and you have enough ego for a continual argument about what degree is better.
The fact is engineering is probably one of the easiest degrees to get into at uni, however it is one of the hardest to complete.
Another way to think about it is like this, who wants to hire an engineer with a pass to credit average? I would say not a lot of people. However, with commerce, if you have passes and credits you can easily get a job if you have chosen the right major. So this is another reason that one could argue as to why engineering is “harder”.
On the other hand, engineers go way too far. If engineering was the be all and end all, then why do we even bother teaching anything else? Why do commerce people even have jobs? What use are they? Fact is there is also a need for commerce, and there is a need for people with skills in accounting, economics, finance, marketing, human resources, etc.
Realistically while some engineers do get hired in a few of these areas, they are a minority in these fields. The bulk of hiring in these commerce areas are from commerce courses. It’s like me saying, I got a grad job at BHP with a commerce degree so I’m smarter than engineers because I work at a mining company. That logic is stupid. So too is the argument that I got graduate job at Macquarie bank with an engineering degree so I’m smarter than commerce students. It just doesn’t add up.
Overall, in my view, if you want to see whether a degree is a waste of time or not, there is an easy test. Just ask yourself, ‘will this degree get me paid for the rest of my working life?’ If yes then you are sweet. If no, you probably do ARTS
Well getting into engineering is easy yes, due to no one wanting to study it (skills shortage). This is the same with Info tech, we only have like 80 people in our class for this year and its easy to get in, else my course would be cancelled by now , i must thank those international students for filling in the places.Conspirocy said:I'm really sick of the whole engineering v commerce argument that keeps happening. The only reason it happens is because most of the commerce people got higher UAI's and so they think they are smarter. Engineers on the other hand think that they have to do more work at uni and that they have a harder course. Then you add the fact that some people with extremely high UAI’s go into engineering, and you have enough ego for a continual argument about what degree is better.
The fact is engineering is probably one of the easiest degrees to get into at uni, however it is one of the hardest to complete.
Another way to think about it is like this, who wants to hire an engineer with a pass to credit average? I would say not a lot of people. However, with commerce, if you have passes and credits you can easily get a job if you have chosen the right major. So this is another reason that one could argue as to why engineering is “harder”.
On the other hand, engineers go way too far. If engineering was the be all and end all, then why do we even bother teaching anything else? Why do commerce people even have jobs? What use are they? Fact is there is also a need for commerce, and there is a need for people with skills in accounting, economics, finance, marketing, human resources, etc.
Realistically while some engineers do get hired in a few of these areas, they are a minority in these fields. The bulk of hiring in these commerce areas are from commerce courses. It’s like me saying, I got a grad job at BHP with a commerce degree so I’m smarter than engineers because I work at a mining company. That logic is stupid. So too is the argument that I got graduate job at Macquarie bank with an engineering degree so I’m smarter than commerce students. It just doesn’t add up.
Overall, in my view, if you want to see whether a degree is a waste of time or not, there is an easy test. Just ask yourself, ‘will this degree get me paid for the rest of my working life?’ If yes then you are sweet. If no, you probably do ARTS
From O-Week, one of the yellow shirts told us that a cow was deliberately placed on top of the building with a sundial on it.Conspirocy said:we put a flag on top of the library at the end of last session and someone took photos