Computer Systems, Electronic/Electrical and Software, all describe what you've asked, make a time with one of their staff to sit down for a yarn. wait till you're 20, then you get UE for free.if that's still a year or so away, work, have fun, earn some money and buy things/save for things that will make studying more comfortableI also agree with Rii, you will get some seriously terrible lecturers, guess what? no one gives a shit, you still have to pass.
Why do you want to study the course?
WHERERERE ARE DA TROLOLOLOLS AT?
Hey OB, do you have a student loan from your 3D course?
Because it's something that's always interested me, and because I know if I get through it I'll come out with a decent job in an area that I'd enjoy, presumably.
Not good enough.A programme coordinator is not going to accept that as a valid reason for wanting admission.
Sure, whatever.You're going into this pissing into the wind. Your lack of quals and school work don't paint a pretty picture so a programme coordinator isn't going to be able to distinguish that you're passionate about the subject and know what you want by just looking at your academic record. You're going to basically have to interview for your acceptance. Simply saying "because I like it" isn't going to wash. you have to convince them that you're up to it and will be seeing it through.Be thankful you don't have to write a 2000 word essay, spend 2hrs filling out applications and provide character/work references as well as applying for scholarships, it's what I've been doing and am currently doing and have had Skype meetings, countless emails and phone conversations with programme coordinators across various unis, and they always asked the same thing - "why do you want to study this"?.
Where do you get the idea of this programme coordinator jealously guarding the entrance to the first-year of undergraduate degrees?
Well I just got back and things are looking up. In a way.I went to the faculty of engineering and had a talk with someone there. The first thing she said was 'what do you want to do' as I believe someone already mentioned she would. The next thing she said was to do a bachelor of science with a computer science major, like her first reaction is to get rid of anyone trying to get in - she later mentioned a lot of people want in there - so I told her the points bounty had mentioned about the extra year being worth it and she conceded.TLDR is that I have to go to summer school, do MATHS 102 and PHYSICS 103 (or may have to do 102 instead she said) which apparently will be very hard having 4 hours of lecture a day but is doable. I convinced her I work hard and can do it. Then following that I have to be enrolled in a bachelor of science and not engineering to do math 108 and physics 120 as well as two other papers. Apparently SCIGEN 101G is strongly recommended (printed just like that). The fourth paper she recommended for me is COMPSCI 101 which is 'principles of programming'.Their requirements are quite strict all along the way, so of course I have to work hard but I see no reason I can't do it - if, as said, I work hard.Following that, I can then transfer from a bachelor of science into engineering, assuming they allow it.The good thing here is that failing the transfer into engineering I can continue on with doing comp sci.Thoughts?
just remember if you want to transfer from the BSc into the BEng, Auckland will require a B+ or A (i forget which one auckland is) average across your papers in first year - passing the papers isnt good enough
Are you getting AUT confused with University of Auckland?I'm wondering if the math and physics courses are even too advanced for me, I really got no education in the area. I can add multiply subtract and divide, little more.Only thing is there's really nothing more basic than that, asides from math 101, and if I do that then it'll mess up the whole plan.I wouldn't mind ending up in computer science, the extra year coming off would be a relief, but I'll still push for it as it sets me up better for the future.Gah, decisions. I don't even know what 2sin(x) is
I think it was a B average with B+ in math and physics.
Diploma would probably be a good place to start. It'll teach you the basics. Once you have the underlying knowledge, API's become your friend and learning just becomes a thing you do without realising it.I mentioned .NET, and I'm going to get shot by Tiwa for doing so. BUT, it's a very corporate framework, and it's easy to learn with plenty of examples. C# is my preference, but I learnt VB.NET in 2 days (after knowing C#.NET for ~ year) There is a huge amount of jobs for .NET developers and our universities seem to be churning out Java developers, which leaves an area that is in demand at the moment. If you choose this route, do it quickly because I foresee in a year or two it will be much harder to get a .NET jobOnce you learn one language, you can read and interpret almost every other language there is.EDIT: I concur with the Monkey