u/SyrianGosling

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How would you ease the transition from school to university/college?

It feels like the jump from school-->uni is really large for most students. Having to study an hour or two a day to studying 16 hours + in medical school is insanely unrealistic

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u/SyrianGosling — 2 days ago
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Hello everyone. I'm going to university a year early (skipping 12) and I constantly feel paranoid about not being on the suitable level of physics needed for a bachelors (I'm planning to move onto masters and PhD in the future)

Do you happen to recommend any good channels or videos on youtube?

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 7 days ago
▲ 1

Hello everyone. I'm going to university a year early (skipping 12) and I constantly feel paranoid about not being on the suitable level of physics needed for a bachelors (I'm planning to move onto masters and PhD in the future)

Do you happen to recommend any good channels or videos on youtube?

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 7 days ago
▲ 2

Hello everyone. I'm going to university a year early (skipping 12) and I constantly feel paranoid about not being on the suitable level of physics needed for a bachelors (I'm planning to move onto masters and PhD in the future)

Do you happen to recommend any good channels or videos on youtube?

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 7 days ago
▲ 1

I barely see anybody talk about this specialisation so I thought I'd ask

PS : There is no flair for nuclear. I just put electric because I'd assume its the closest.

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 8 days ago
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My friend told me that a student can skip the 12th year and begin a foundation year in Italy to learn the language + whatever you missed out on in the year you skipped. Is this information true?

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 10 days ago
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Hello everyone. I'm going to university in Italy next year and I have to choose a specific career path. I've always been a math/physics student rather than a bio/chem student. I'm horrible at memorisation and prefer to understand the concepts behind a specific topic.

My plan is to get a bachelor in engineering and proceed to get a masters in nuclear engineering. Do you guys think it's a good idea? I feel sort of lost and I'm not sure on what to do.

I'd prefer answers from people who studied in EU countries. I'm pretty sure the education system there is different from the US. Thanks!!

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 10 days ago
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I'm going to university in Italy in a few months and am thinking of going down the path of becoming a medical laboratory scientist. I'm worried about whether it's gonna be replaced by AI though.

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 11 days ago
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Hello everyone. I'm planning on studying law in Italy in a couple of years. I still haven't decided what career I'm choosing to go into but I've been thinking of law for some time. The reason i chose it instead of fields involving Biology/Chemistry/physics is because I'm horrible at science. On the other hand I'm quite good at logic, philosophy, and reading in general. According to a lot of the sources I've looked at, studying law seems to align with that skillset.

I would be fine with studying law but the issue I'm facing is the fact that you have to study for over 12 hours a day at times. I can't even begin to comprehend that. The most I've studied is around 4 hours a day. And that's during exam time. Usually I don't even study (I get very good grades though, I focus a lot during lessons)

I just can't get over the fact that law would require me to study as much as 12 hours a day. How do you even have time to eat? sleep? wash your hair? take a shower? anything?

I'm horrible at science as I mentioned eariler and I feel like no career suits me. I'm so lost and I don't know what to do.

note : For those in the EU, I have done a few mock IMAT tests. I got 0 in all Biology/Chemistry questions (yes, quite literally 0) and got 95%+ in the logic and mathematics segment.

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 13 days ago
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hi everyone. I'm planning to study in Italy in a few years and decided to do an imat past paper to get a general understanding of my abilities. The paper was split into segments "logic and general knowledge", "Biology", "Chemistry", and "math and physics"

I did amazingly on the logic and general knowledge segment. probably around 95%+ accuracy with as little as 20 seconds on one question.

In biology and chemistry, I got around 0 correct. That's right, literally 0. I'm horrible and chemistry and biology. And that's really worrying considering I'm planning on studying medicine.

In math and physics, I did quite well. I found the questions really easy and around, or beneath, my current level.

I'm really worried. I do study biology and chemistry in my native language though (arabic) and I'm scared on whether that affected my skills during that segment. The words were literally completely new to me.

Am I the only one who's faced a similar situation? I'm panicking really hard right now and I don't know how to feel.

reddit.com
u/SyrianGosling — 14 days ago