you mean to tell me that stupid piece of paper...with those dumb 4 questions is worth that much?? ............................sigh...............Wooz said:The cut-off for interstates is typically above 99, but you can get an interview offer as low as 93 if you have an application that is exemplar/outstanding.
narrowpin said:you mean to tell me that stupid piece of paper...with those dumb 4 questions is worth that much?? ............................sigh...............
narrowpin JCU's entry selection criteria has been designed to facilitate the entry of students who have experiences or can explain in detail why they want to do medicine, what they can contribute, tropical medicine and the health problems of Northern Australia and Qld at heart. Personally, I think JCU's system with selection criteria with the comprehensive application, verified documents, references should be incorporated into all medical school application systems.TheMelissa said:
Whoa, whoa, whoa. Stop right there!
Surely the decision to exclude the UMAT as a criterion for selection suggested the true weighting of the application? I doubt the decision to replace the ACER scheme with the pre-application form was a light one.
Personally, I kick it really old school. Keep the marks in the 99th-100th percentile, be a decent and honest human being and the rest will work itself out. On the other hand, all medical schools have been moving away from academic-exclusionary admissions for the past, like, forever. If memory serves me correctly, the JCU application was tailored specifically for applicants who had a keen and passionate understanding of the rather unique socio-political atmosphere of Queensland’s healthcare system. (Question 2, I believe? Had something to do with tropical, indigenous and rural medicine.) Ultimately, they were looking for applicants who would go on to truly serve their community, whether it be within the political or social arenas of medicine. I can see why an applicant with less than stellar academic credentials would be advantaged in some respects to the JCU application.
Take the time to learn about Australia’s healthcare system instead of just dismissing it. It's a mistake that a lot of interviewees make. If you find yourself bored to death by the idea of it all, you ought to consider a different path. Medicine, after all, is incredibly socio-politically charged and a great portion of your medical studies will be devoted to understanding how incredibly fucked up The System is and how to fuel progressive change. (Hey thurr, Master of Public Health!) It's not all stethoscopes and pharmaceutical dinners.
Is this based on observations, a document or what ?Wooz said:The cut-off for interstates is typically above 99, but you can get an interview offer as low as 93 if you have an application that is exemplar/outstanding.
I'm not doing a masters in public health (yet). I'm a first year who gets really bored so turns to politics. Any good, though?Wooz said:I agree with most of your points Mel, I'm also studying Public Health at the moment!
I also wish prospective med students knew and were asked about the problems they will encounter when they graduate aswell before getting into medicine or taking bonded/rural places.
Based on students results and interview offers. Like I said your application must be of the highest calibre. But it is typically 99+ for interstaters and yes there are 2nd round offers for students who achieved above there uai/ter/op prediction, etc.dolbinau said:Is this based on observations, a document or what ?
It does sound a little to good to be true
Also, I don't know how it works interstate - but are there second round offers for those who meet the threshold but don't have the predicted UAI?
Yeah. Honestly, short of making the admissions committee fall to their knees and start weeping over your Shakespearean-in-magnitude application, you'd need an incredibly high UAI.Wooz said:Based on students results. Like I said your application must be of the highest calibre. But it is typically 99+ for interstaters and yes there are 2nd round offers, and those who get a lower uai than their expected required op/uai/ter prediction maybe rejected.
hehe. Yes that might be a stretch!TheMelissa said:Yeah. Honestly, short of making the admissions committee fall to their knees and start weeping over your Shakespearean-in-magnitude application, you'd need an incredibly high UAI.
u can get an interview normally with low ninties as an interstater but i'v only heard of one example - a person i knew got an interview (and an offer) with ~94-93 but he was rural and he emphasized that fact repeatedly in the application. JCU do favour rural/aboriginal applicants.dolbinau said:Is this based on observations, a document or what ?
It does sound a little to good to be true
are you a chick or a guy?meethu said:u can get an interview normally with low ninties as an interstater but i'v only heard of one example - a person i knew got an interview (and an offer) with ~94-93 but he was rural and he emphasized that fact repeatedly in the application. JCU do favour rural/aboriginal applicants.
obviosly a guy as stated in my avatar or whateva its called.narrowpin said:are you a chick or a guy?
UNSW and Monash, lol Uadel.nottellingu said:Well actually i know that monash and adelaide have the best reps. Jcu is probably not that high unfotunately but in saying that it wont affect a graduate too badly in med.
Hey woozy which uni ru doing med at ?Wooz said:entry into specialisations are determined on exams and not personal merit, etc.