I am finding melb uni quite difficult so i was browsing through google and found that the atar requirement of civil engineering is 61.75 and 60 for electronic engineering at latrobe. if i'm struggling how the hell do people who get 60 even live a day in their engiineering (or law) course at latrobe/rmit/swinburne?
Do those unis make it easier for them, or do most people end up dropping out?
Firstly, I think the ATAR is more a reflection of hard work/effort than intelligence (capacity for learning). Remember, most subjects involve ROTE learning, sometimes to a large extent. Unless you have 1) an excellent memory or 2) can pick up things very quickly or 3) avoid ROTE learning subjects as much as possible, there's going to be quite a lot of hard work required in getting a decent score. And many students just aren't very motivated during VCE. And, most of them aren't at schools that will push them a bit more (typically, private schools). Therefore, they end up with rather ordinary ATAR's.
Once you get to uni though, it's quite different. Many different subjects, no school environment, a different style of learning is required. Everyone's at uni, and its now a different game; some of those mid-level ATAR students will do ok.
But are the courses easier? It's pretty hard to know unless you've done the same course at different institutions. In some cases the answer is almost certainly 'yes' (but only to an extent) due to universities marking on a curve. Many courses won't greatly adjust things on a curve though. Further, a lot are accredited (accounting, law, medicine), which ensures consistency between the degrees. It's quite difficult to assess overall, but I would say generally, although there may be some difference in some courses...it's not a lot. I've spoken to people who thought, after transferring to a 'GO8' uni from non-GO8, that the latter was noticeably easy, but you'd sort of expect that where you're marking on a curve with a noticeable gap in ATAR requirements. Anecdotally, most transfer students seemed to think there was little difference between degrees, other than in learning styles.