Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Filmmaking school in Australia

Filmmaking school in Australia?
I want to attend a filmmaking college but my parents want me to go to Sydney. I am all the way over here in Las Vegas, Nevada USA so I am really not familiar with the schools in Sydney. I have done some reasearch and I found Sydney Film School. It seems okay right now. I want some review, though. If you are someone who knows about this school or are currently attending this school, could you please write a review?
Sydney - 3 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
Well i live in sydney and I don't know about that school but i really recommend this one: AFTRS- Australian Film Television and Radio School "AFTRS has produced some of the biggest names in the industry and has built an international reputation for excellence." http://www.aftrs.edu.au/ hope this helped in some way!
2 :
i agree with kristy we both live in sydney and are like BBFLS anyway you should move here its amazing and go to the school she suggested
3 :
there is NIDA, a very good school in sydney. heres a link: http://www.nida.com.au/



Monday, January 16, 2012

Studying in Australia without High School Education

Studying in Australia without High School Education?
I'm 18, South African and have been living in China for the last 8 years. I have 2 questions: Are there any programs in Australia for people in my condition? I have not been to school since grade 3, so are there any programs to maybe catch me up or something? Are there any courses, in university or other that I can take even though I don't have year 12 studies or just without any highschool qualifications.
Other - Education - 1 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
No - you need to have a high school education to qualify to get into any program in Australia - and you need acceptance to get a student visa



Sunday, January 8, 2012

Do ppl in Australia ride kangaroos to school

Do ppl in Australia ride kangaroos to school?
i want to know cuz im gonna go to school in australia
Adolescent - 9 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
LOL no but they do call us British people poms which isn't nice.
2 :
My Australian friends got kangaroos for their Sweet 16's instead of cars like Americans do.
3 :
It's just a stereotype. Australians don't ride kangaroos to school any more than Americans fly to school on a bald eagle. You can't actually "ride" a kangaroo neither. They're the wrong shape for being ridden. (upright)
4 :
Aren't you the one that said you were 'gonna move to anutha school'?
5 :
It's a Sterotype.
6 :
Yeah, and everyone in LA lives next to a celebrity
7 :
No. We either walk, take the bus, take the train or the car. Do Americans ride fat people to school?
8 :
Lol. Yes we do but we ride kangaroos to Primary School and emus to High School. Then if we choose to go to university we ride cassowary's.
9 :
No. Most Australian's have never even seen a kangaroo. Oh, and, you cannot even approach them if you do see them, they are huge and violent, and they're actually a pest here.



Sunday, January 1, 2012

Moving to australia?? School

Moving to australia?? School?
Will Moving to Australia Affect My Education??? Ok, so my family (mum, dad, brother) and i are moving from england to australia (New South Wales-probably Sydney) in about 4 months. I am 14 and in yr 9. I have started some GCSE courses early and am about to do some exams which are equivalent to 20% of my maths GCSE. it is nearly the end of my final yr 9 term at school and after this, i might not be going back to a school on england so im wondering is there any ways i can transfer all of the work i have done so far in england to australia without starting all over again and working my way up to the level im at now. i am also wondering if the change will be too drastic in terms of my education. If possible can u also tell me: -What the equivalent to GCSEs are in NSW -What australian schools are like (public and private) plus what you have to pay for -What kinds of exams do they have and what yrs do they do them in -Will i have to pay for education even if im on a permanent visa Pls answer and thank you very much if u do. This has been really bothering my family and i would be really grateful if u can help :D x
Other - Australia - 6 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
really i know that it will not a tip is on the first week of school be very out going and helpful if u like someone (girl) ask her if u can hang out with her. good luck!!!
2 :
I have no idea what GCSE stands for so here's a breakdown of NSW schooling. Year 9 and 10 do the compulsory subjects like math, english, science, history, geography, pe, plus two electives. You can choose languages, building subjects like metalwork, it, business subjects, pe subjects, etc.. At the end of yr 10 you have your school certificate. This is pretty much compulsory for anyone. Your school certificate is externally set exams that the whole state do. You only have these exams for english, math, science, history and geography. People who have an apprenticeship or don't want to go on finish after yr 10. Year 11 & 12 you must do English, other then that all your other subjects are electives, you can do pretty much anything. At the nd of yr 12 you have your hsc higher school certificate. This is exams in every subject then ranked against the state to get an uai university admissions index, if you applied for one to get into uni. You have exams twice per year, half yearlys and yearlys though this changes slightly with yr 10 and 12. You also have trials for your hsc. This is on top of tests and assessments. Your standard exams are set by the teacher and marked by the teacher. You pay for both public and primary school. Public is often just a donation of up to a few hundred per year. Private schools can cost from $1500 - $15,000 per year. Being on a visa you MAY have to pay more, I'm not sure on the rules with that. A lot of things are subsidized by the government for citizens.
3 :
we do exams yr 9, 10, 11, 12 Yes you have to pay for education we dont know what GCSE means you will find it really hard at first because the teaching styles here are very differend but all schools have people you can go to for extra help.
4 :
I was going to answer this question, but then I saw Mel's answer and she's pretty much hit the nail on the head.
5 :
Mel's answer is spot on but she wasn't sure about the cost to you as a new immigrant. Permanent Residents are treated exactly the same as citizens for most things including the cost of education so the levy is all you'll pay in a public school and you won't have to pay international fees in a private school. At university, PRs pay domestic fees (not international) but are not eligible for HECS-HELP student loans.
6 :
Mels answer is perfect. But we have a system using credit points now. [I finished school last year]. You need to pass pretty much every subject you do. This is only counted in year 11 and 12. All up you will need 20 credit points, at least getting a C in every subject. If you don't get them all then you don't get a certificate of education.