QUOTE(dwintersun @ Jul 23 2011, 06:57 PM)
I'm in the midst of aiming for: University of Melbourne / University of B.Columbia / & universities in UK.
What are my chances of entering to the above with MUFY?
I'm planning to take Law / Business / Social Science / Psychology. (Order of preferences)
With a decent to strong result, I'm quite confident that you'll be able to enter the
University of Melbourne or indeed most other Australian schools (barring any silly problems like academic issues, because academics are really the only sort of serious requirement they have, and even then it isn't always very high for some courses - for
Law and
Psychology they should only be "above average" but for certain social sciences such as
Economics,
Econometrics,
Statistics, or
Actuarial Science they will be greater). Australian schools are actually very international-friendly, so
MUFY (being
Monash's program) would get you in easily.
Perhaps you haven't yet commenced the necessary checks, because the
University of British Columbia only offers a
JD, an
LLM, and a
PhD in Law. It's good to consider graduate destinations early, of course, but this is not relevant to your real (immediate) intentions.
QUOTE(strategist @ Jul 23 2011, 07:40 PM)
2. Law is a competitive course and hence you need a competive qualification. Sad to say MUFY is not really on par with other widely recognised pre-U (say A-levels). You could probably get into Melbourne, but you will have a tough time getting into UK law school. Dunno about Canada though.
Law in the UK is indeed quite competitive, but this really only matters if you're aiming for top dogs like
Oxbridge,
LSE,
UCL,
King's, and
Warwick (for the standard
A Level or
IB student, the only real challenge is
Oxbridge).
I cannot objectively comment on
MUFY's competitivity or standards or how it compares to the
A Levels, except that I study at a school which claims to be "one of the top universities in the world", and here we have students who come from everywhere and who've done one of
A Levels,
IB,
UEC,
SAM,
MUFY,
SATs and a plethora of other qualifications.
Of course,
MUFY isn't the most universal qualification there is, but there is no question that you can get admitted to a school for
Law in the UK - it's just that it may be harder if you're going for something in Britain's top 5.
Economics at said schools is also highly competitive (note
Oxford does not have straight
Economics).
Business,
Accounting,
Finance,
Management etc are fairly easy to get into (again,
Oxbridge will be the only real challenge for any course they have, unless you're doing
Medicine which is competitive all over the place).