Uni Stuff > Law
Macquarie law
AzureBlue:
How many parts of the IAA exams are there altogether? 3?
tram:
Yup, part three takes a minimun of one year to do. Shortest time you can get fully accredited in is 5 years
AzureBlue:
--- Quote from: tram on April 26, 2010, 09:21:51 pm ---Yup, part three takes a minimun of one year to do. Shortest time you can get fully accredited in is 5 years
--- End quote ---
How do you do part III? Study for it yourself? We can't get exemptions for that do we (don't we all just love exemptions)?
tram:
lol, yea thats correct. You have to study for it by youself. You do it when you're working already so i suppose there's help around if you need it.
I wonder if you could just study by youself completely can just pass all three parts by youself in like three years...............
humph:
--- Quote from: AzureBlue on April 26, 2010, 09:12:51 pm ---
--- Quote from: humph on April 26, 2010, 09:07:07 pm ---http://studyat.anu.edu.au/programs/4443XBACTS;overview.html
see also
http://studyat.anu.edu.au/programs/3401XBACTS;overview.html
It doesn't exempt you from part II unless you do honours... Though few people do honours in Actuarial.
Residential colleges vary: $160-300 self-catered, $250-300 catered.
--- End quote ---
Wow, that's so cheap! I was expecting more like $500 catered. But it sucks how you don't get exempted for doing a double degree at ANU :(
I'm thinking Melbourne for single degree and hopefully honours year or Macquarie for double degree. Hmm
--- End quote ---
? Just because you do a double degree doesn't mean you can't do honours as well. It just adds an extra year to your degree. It's exactly the same as at Macquarie and at UMelb - the only way you can be exempt from part II in any of those is to do honours.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version