I’m in a bit of an uncertain situation and confused state of mind. I’ve finished 2 out of 3 years of a science degree and I received a bonded offer to University of Newcastle. As happy as I am to get in (and would’ve jumped at this opportunity last year), I’m more interested in going to USYD postgraduate medicine. The following are the reasons I’ve come up with for either option.
Reasons for Newcastle:
- I get to do the degree I want (i.e. medicine, not science) right now and not later
- The experience of living away from home and the life experiences and lessons that come with that
- Opportunity to meet new people, make new friends
- Don’t have to study for GAMSAT and go through the related stresses
- I’ve heard the USYD medicine course has a greater anatomy focus than other unis which I’ve been told is unnecessary and not something I’m a fan of or looking forward to
Reasons for Sydney:
- Financially cheaper. My parents would be funding me going to Newcastle though they don’t seem to bothered by it, in fact, they’d prefer I go to Newcastle now instead of deferring (i.e. potentially finishing medicine a year later if I don’t get postgraduate)
- Potentially get into USYD medicine and be with friends
- Potentially do med at a more prestigious university, i.e. USYD, and in theory be with a more capable cohort of students (or would I be wrong in saying that?)
- Potentially get an unbonded place at some uni
- Could do TSP (USYD program) and get some papers published (I’ve heard this is important when applying to the increasingly competitive specialisation places, thoughts?)
- Could do a Masters of Public Health alongside my med degree at USYD, or possibly at Newcastle once I’ve completed my science degree (if I don’t get USYD med)
I would like to hear your opinions on this list and if you have anything to add or any advice to give. (hopefully the lists made sense)
Also, would I have any issuing with deferring or is it a simple process? If I can’t defer, I’d rather just take it than risk never getting into medicine.
Last thing I wanted to ask was if there was really any difference between med students graduating from undergraduate vs graduate med programs (other than maturity which seems linked more to age than the courses themselves).
Reasons for Newcastle:
- I get to do the degree I want (i.e. medicine, not science) right now and not later
- The experience of living away from home and the life experiences and lessons that come with that
- Opportunity to meet new people, make new friends
- Don’t have to study for GAMSAT and go through the related stresses
- I’ve heard the USYD medicine course has a greater anatomy focus than other unis which I’ve been told is unnecessary and not something I’m a fan of or looking forward to
Reasons for Sydney:
- Financially cheaper. My parents would be funding me going to Newcastle though they don’t seem to bothered by it, in fact, they’d prefer I go to Newcastle now instead of deferring (i.e. potentially finishing medicine a year later if I don’t get postgraduate)
- Potentially get into USYD medicine and be with friends
- Potentially do med at a more prestigious university, i.e. USYD, and in theory be with a more capable cohort of students (or would I be wrong in saying that?)
- Potentially get an unbonded place at some uni
- Could do TSP (USYD program) and get some papers published (I’ve heard this is important when applying to the increasingly competitive specialisation places, thoughts?)
- Could do a Masters of Public Health alongside my med degree at USYD, or possibly at Newcastle once I’ve completed my science degree (if I don’t get USYD med)
I would like to hear your opinions on this list and if you have anything to add or any advice to give. (hopefully the lists made sense)
Also, would I have any issuing with deferring or is it a simple process? If I can’t defer, I’d rather just take it than risk never getting into medicine.
Last thing I wanted to ask was if there was really any difference between med students graduating from undergraduate vs graduate med programs (other than maturity which seems linked more to age than the courses themselves).