Hi everyone,
I received an ATAR of 98.00, so think I can get into the Arts/Law program at ANU, assuming the clearly-in doesn't move up too much from last year's 96 ATAR.
I'm interested in a variety of careers, such as law, foreign diplomacy, teaching, journalism, and lastly, a career as an academic.
As part of my Arts degree, I want to study Italian, and either literature or philosophy (assuming I can't do both as part of a double degree).
I'm leaning towards ANU over all the Victorian universities for arts/law at the moment, as I've heard good things about the philosophy, languages and international law faculties at ANU.
If I were to study a PhB (Arts), I would study literature, philosophy, Italian and maybe some international law.
1. Is a LLB/BA at ANU general enough to change career direction after I graduate?
2. Is the BA section of the Combined Law degree enough to get into a BA(Hons), and perhaps later, a doctoral degree?
3. Is a law degree at ANU competitive here in Melbourne? I assume so (after reading the law stickies), but I'm worried, as ANU Law apparently marks quite harshly (not dissimilar to any other Go8 institution, I guess).
3. Can I get into the PhB with an ATAR of 98.00? I've heard that a negotiated offer is achievable with high 97s?
4. Do I need to know exactly what I'm interested in before enrolling in a PhB?
5. Can I move from a PhB to the LLB/BA if I don't satisfy the HD-requirement?
6. I'm not 18 till mid-2013, will this affect how much I get out of extra-curriculars on-campus significantly?
Basically, I'm most worried about being locked into not being able to pursue further study in the humanities, as the BA section might only be seen as an add-on to the law degree, perhaps not studying things as in depth as you would, say, in a BA or PhB.
I think if I don't do a law degree, I'd be leaning more towards doing a BA at Melbourne Uni, due to costs of accommodation, over the PhB. I don't really know if the PhB is suited to me, as I have no clue as to what my interests are (outside of international law, languages, philosophy, and literature), and don't want to graduate from the PhB program if I'm not really sure I want to go into academia.
Am I right in assuming that law is becoming, as time passes, more a stepping stone into other careers (eg journalism and politics), rather than a concrete pathway into law?
Thanks!