If you're serious about medicine/radiology, don't go near radiography. Its a terrible degree with barely any science involved except for the basic anatomy/physics and high school level chemistry/biology that you touch on in your first year. The rest of the degree mainly revolves around memorising body positions and machine settings (exposure factors) for different types of xrays. Theres a reason why this degree used to be a TAFE course. Due to the lack of real science, this degree will not prepare you for gamsat and medicine. Youre better off doing a b.medsci or b.sci.
Also, dont be fooled by the atar cut off for this degree, the course itself is EXTREMELY easy. Unfortunately though, by the end of it youll be qualified to be nothing more than a radiographer/xray technician. Although your starting salary is quite attractive, itll cap pretty low and this career also has almost zero job progression (radiographer to chief rad, thats it). And that will take years... Theres also the radiation risk, which although minimal still exists, especially if you want to work in hospitals where they require you to operate portable x-rays (where you have to stand in the room with the patient) and fluroscopy (real time imaging = constant stream of radiation). The job itself is also very repetitive and physically demanding as youre on your feet all day pressing buttons. I imagine itd especially suck years down the track when you hear about your friends progressing in their careers while youre still a factory drone in the basement of a hospital somewhere.
However, do this degree if:
- youre not that ambitious and want a 'sorta sciencey' job that pays ok
- youre willing to go back to uni after a few years of work and study ultrasound (not many opportunities in MRI). Then you can take ultrasounds for the rest of your life instead which I guess pays slightly better...
- you want a really easy degree so that can get a super high WAM and apply for postgrad med afterwards. This only works though if youre really disciplined and are willing to learn the science you need on your own.