Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - University ranking - What's the experience of studying at the University of Sydney?
What's the experience of studying at the University of Sydney?
1. There are many courses in engineering, but only 20 hours a week. In my freshman year, I had five classes, about 25 hours a week. Business lasts more than ten hours a week, and it can last for four days three days a week. In contrast, no matter how the engineering curriculum is arranged, it will take at most one day, usually half a day. But even so, I feel much happier than domestic students. It doesn't matter to us what military science Ma Zhesi is doing ... By the way, the most noteworthy thing is that we don't have military training ... The basic courses of freshmen and sophomores are generally simple, and the final exam can be solved by a data set formula. If you are serious, 70-80 points or more is no problem. (Great gods are generally above 85) As for specialized courses, it depends on my own nature. Anyway, my professional courses have been in a state of being difficult to keep up with, and my final grade is generally between 50 and 65. Oh, yes, we passed 50 points. However, if you fail, you will have to retake the exam, and more than 4000 Australian dollars will float out directly.

2. The laboratory may be very different from other majors. I think it may be because the teacher thought our major was too hard and gave us some compensation. Our laboratory can only be accessed by swiping the student card held by our professionals. Our laboratory has a locked cabinet that can be used for free, and there is a sink at home, as well as a microwave oven and a refrigerator. There are 1 yuan canned drinks in the refrigerator (2 yuan is sold outside), free chocolates and frozen pizza. However, the most incredible thing is that we also have a very long sofa. Above the sofa inclined at 45 degrees, there is a super-large display screen of more than 20 inches, and below the display screen, there is an X-box with two handles ... (Imagine, leaning on a comfortable sofa, your eyes can just see the screen when you relax, so you don't have to look up or down, which is very cool! )

3. study. Finally, when it comes to this hard study. As mentioned above, the basic courses I am studying at present are not very difficult. As long as I am willing to study hard, there is no problem. In other words, in fact, as long as you understand what the teacher is talking about in class, you can finish the assigned homework after class, and you can get high marks without doing anything extra. Regarding specialized courses, we are used to the feeling of more than 20 pages of project reports and spending a week skipping other courses and then sitting in the laboratory every day. Every time I finish my homework, I have to rack my brains to find out what it is about. In the last semester of Senior Two, I often stayed up until 2 o'clock in the morning, just to preview the experiment to be done tomorrow. Otherwise, if I don't understand, it will be very stressful to go the next day, which may be related to my poor English. It seems relatively easy for local students to learn this major. But in the last few weeks of the semester, no matter what subjects are the same, people who don't make good use of their time (such as me) will suffer big losses.

After class, I just want to advise all students who want to enter the University of Sydney to study, work and join a club. Unless you are a great god, you can only choose two of the three at most. If you consider it all, you can only fail ... the advice of the club chairman. To tell the truth, I don't have a job, but I can't afford it myself, because there are many activities to participate in, and the energy consumed by the organization is somewhat greater than what I can afford now. Of course, this still varies from person to person.