PLT may be completed in full during the last year (5th, or 6th for some) provided that you have completed all 'Priestley 11' core subjects. These subjects include:melsc said:It probably was UOW but as I have said many times, when i went to Sydney and NSW open days they would both claim to pioneer things such as small group teaching etc... etc..
I know UOW, UWS and UTS have this...in fact i think if you do the LLB there you can actually do the whole PLT. For UWS I think its about half the PLT for combine law, provided you chose particular electives, how much can u do at UOW?
Yes it will. How? I don't know. It just says so. I'm just following the recommended study schedule at the moment. Maybe year12/Ms12/MiuMiu might know more.melsc said:does it depend on what electives you take how much PLT is completed?
There are only four of the 2cp skills subjects, and you named them all. Unless you also mean advanced legal skills (LLB396 or something like that)?MiuMiu said:The subjects compulsory for us are Communication Skills (client interviewing), Advocacy, Dispute Management, Drafting, and theres one more that I can't remember right at the moment.
I am unsure of the tone you expect me to read into this, so I will assume it is a genuine question. In my experience, no, it is not common at all, although how you would expect anyone on here to be able to provide a proper answer to this question is beyond me, as any accounts that we give are purely anecdotal.wheredanton said:Is it common at uow for people to be keen to drop their other degree?
It was a serious question. I think I read somewhere that you wanted to drop the non law component. I also read that Mui Mui is now just straight up law.hfis said:I am unsure of the tone you expect me to read into this, so I will assume it is a genuine question. In my experience, no, it is not common at all, although how you would expect anyone on here to be able to provide a proper answer to this question is beyond me, as any accounts that we give are purely anecdotal.
I would say that there is a higher instance of people wanting to drop their other degree at UOW than at other unis (USYD et al) because, as far as I know, it is not possible to do such a thing at the other unis. UOW on the other hand offers a four-year LLB program for undergraduates, which makes the transfer possible.
In my case, a BMedSc is completely irrelevant to my interests (although this was not the case when I chose it as a preference), and where I want to go with my degree. As I perform substantially better in my law subjects than in those from the health and behavioural sciences schedule, and I have no intention to ever use a BMedSc, keeping it is a waste of my time and money (those subjects aren't cheap, y'know).