hipsta_jess said:
..apparently we 'can think for ourselves, not like those Sydney students' lol
Whats with all this Sydney bashing?
I'm a 2nd year at Sydney. I'd never heard anything at all about Newcastle uni until I did my 2nd year placement in Newcastle. While I was there, all the OTs from Newcastle uni were all practically falling over themselves trying to prove how much better they think Newcastle uni is. Believe me, it got -really- annoying after the first few days.
hipsta_jess said:
The reason our UAI is so high is coz of demand, demand is because of our reputation. Personally, I think its all a crock of shit, but ya know.
When you say the UAI is about demand, you have to consider the fact that Newcastle has a lot less OT places available.
Like, you guys have around 50-70 people in your course right? Well Sydney has an intake of around 180.
So having less places available at Newcastle automatically pushes the UAI up if there are not enough places to meet demand. Then consider the fact that Newcastle uni is the only uni in the region that offers OT, whereas in the Sydney region theres also UWS. That also makes demand higher.
I find that having such a large amount of students at Sydney means that you really have to learn to figure things out for yourself and research things independently - the total opposite of that sydney-students-don't-think-for-themself thing.
Lu Lu said:
Also we learn a larger variety of OT theroies than Sydney do. Or at least thats what the uni tells us.
hmmmm. Personally, I'm so sick of having to relate everything back to different theories of OT. I wouldn't want to have to do any more of that
Lu Lu said:
More time to cover the anatomy would be good cause we spend six weeks on the upper limb and only six weeks on the rest of the body and are expected to know it all for the final. Also I don't think I'll remember any of it in 3 years when I start working which is kinda scary cause people will rely on me to know that stuff
We do 2 anatomy units, one focussing on trunk and upper limb in 2nd semester of 1st year, and one focussing on the hip and leg and just about everything else in 1st semester 2nd year. It was so insanely detailed, and they made both exams really hard so a lot of people failed.
As for not remembering it when you graduate, I totally understand what you mean. When I was on placement in Newcastle, my supervisor was doing hand therapy with a guy who had a nerve injury. When I asked her what nerve it was, she had no idea! And when she looked it up in the file she couldn't remember where that nerve ran and what it innervated! That made me a bit worried.
The reason Sydney was my first preference is their Operation India program in 4th year, where they send students to different programs being developed all over India. You have to help train health workers and implement different strategies to help the target group. It's usually in India, but I think some years they've gone to Tonga or Bangladesh instead. I really want to work overseas in developing countries when I graduate so it's something I'm really excited about.