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| Tags: australia, best, degrees, physics, universities, zealand |
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#1
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Hi all,
I'm looking for some knowledgeable opinions about schools in Australia and New Zealand. Basically I have been working as a software engineer in Silicon Valley for the last five year and have decided to make a career change, going back to school to get a degree and masters in Physics, spending a few years doing doctoral research on using computer simulations and animations to give insight into quantum mechanics, and then ideally trying to work as either a high school or college Physics or Mathematics teacher. In the near-term I'd like to spend four years of undergrad in New Zealand or Australia because I think that those countries would make excellent places to live overseas and meet interesting people from different backgrounds. Basically I'm trying to find out which universities in New Zealand and Australia have the best Physics programs, with the goal of preparing myself for postgraduate research. My only requirement as far as location would be concerned would be that the campus be near the beach and somewhere windy enough to fly kites, which is a hobby. A good Astronomy program and chess team would be a bonus. Thanks, Alex |
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#2
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On 26 Aug 2005 00:30:38 -0700, "AlexG" wrote:
Hi all, I'm looking for some knowledgeable opinions about schools in Australia and New Zealand. Basically I have been working as a software engineer in Silicon Valley for the last five year and have decided to make a career change, going back to school to get a degree and masters in Physics, spending a few years doing doctoral research on using computer simulations and animations to give insight into quantum mechanics, and then ideally trying to work as either a high school or college Physics or Mathematics teacher. In the near-term I'd like to spend four years of undergrad in New Zealand or Australia because I think that those countries would make excellent places to live overseas and meet interesting people from different backgrounds. Basically I'm trying to find out which universities in New Zealand and Australia have the best Physics programs, with the goal of preparing myself for postgraduate research. My only requirement as far as location would be concerned would be that the campus be near the beach and somewhere windy enough to fly kites, which is a hobby. A good Astronomy program and chess team would be a bonus. Thanks, Alex At this point, knowing the little that I know, I would avoid Flinders University in Adelaide. the softrat Sometimes I get so tired of the taste of my own toes. -- Not the brightest crayon in the box, now, are we? |
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#3
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OK, thanks.
I was thinking that maybe Canterbury U. in New Zealand or Monash U. in Melbourne might be good options. |
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#4
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i was a ph.d student in maths and engineering at monash and would
recommend the physics faculty (from my somewhat indirect perspective) to anyone, astrophysics and astronomy in general is strong there. |
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#5
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On Fri, 26 Aug 2005, AlexG wrote:
I'm looking for some knowledgeable opinions about schools in Australia and New Zealand. Basically I have been working as a software engineer in Silicon Valley for the last five year and have decided to make a career change, going back to school to get a degree and masters in Physics, spending a few years doing doctoral research on using computer simulations and animations to give insight into quantum mechanics, and then ideally trying to work as either a high school or college Physics or Mathematics teacher. In the near-term I'd like to spend four years of undergrad in New Zealand or Australia because I think that those countries would make excellent places to live overseas and meet interesting people from different backgrounds. Basically I'm trying to find out which universities in New Zealand and Australia have the best Physics programs, with the goal of preparing myself for postgraduate research. My only requirement as far as location would be concerned would be that the campus be near the beach and somewhere windy enough to fly kites, which is a hobby. A good Astronomy program and chess team would be a bonus. Australian National University has an excellent reputation for its undergrad course; the top students get to be involved in real research projects. If you don't expect to be one of the top students, then that might not affect you. ANU is not near a beach. Don't know about the other things you're after. Be aware that the usual 4 year program is a 3 year BSc, followed by 1 year of postgrad honours course. In the system here, that 1 year is the only postgrad coursework most people do before going straight into a research only PhD. You also don't have to do the 3 year degree at the same place, so you can hang around near a beach, then go to one of the bigger unis for honours. Of course, you'll need good marks in you 3 year degree to get into honours. There are a bunch of small unis along the Queensland coast - Uni of Central Qld, U of Sunshine Coast, James Cook Uni. JCU has a real physics department (or used to, you might want to check). If you like beaches, consider for BSc. These unis lack the reputation of the bigger unis in the big cities. Here, we're an hour from beaches. Sometimes windy, no chess team afaik, and we only have a small undergrad astronomy selection, but a thriving astro research group, so you might like here as a place to do honours. Sydney Uni also has a good rep (as do others). There was a recent evaluation of teching performance of Australian unis: http://www.uq.edu.au/news/index.html?article=7738 which might be of interest to you. -- Timo Nieminen - Home page: http://www.physics.uq.edu.au/people/nieminen/ E-prints: http://eprint.uq.edu.au/view/person/...,_Timo_A..html Shrine to Spirits: http://www.users.bigpond.com/timo_nieminen/spirits.html |
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