Hi everyone and welcome to HealthHQ.
Thanks for joining us today, my name is
Nicole and it's my pleasure to provide
you with some information about the
University of Adelaide and the
undergraduate degrees on offer in the
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences.
Throughout the session today you'll hear
from some of our academic teaching staff
and I'll be a back bit later to share
some information about the student
support available to you when you join
us in the years to come. You'll also hear
from some of our current students who
will share their experiences with you.
Don't forget to register for our Q&A
session which we'll be hosting after the
information session today. The University
of Adelaide is the third oldest
university in Australia and is
consistently ranked in the top 1% of the world's universities. We
are recognised globally as a leading
research university and we are part of
the group of eight, which comprises
Australia's best research intensive
universities. We're really proud of the
fact that the vast majority of our
research is rated above or well above
world standard. The University has over
27,000 students, 27% of whom are
international. We have three campuses, but
as a student in health you would be located
in the beautiful North Terrace campus
which is in the heart of the city. The
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
is ranked number one in South Australia
for life sciences, medicine, nursing,
psychology and dentistry. Lord Howard
Florey and Dr. J Robin Warren are among
our notable alumni.
As you can see from our undergraduate
degree rankings, studying within the
health and medical sciences faculty
means you're getting a world-class
education ranked very highly in the
state, Australia and the world. I'd now
like to share with you some of our
facilities that you'd be utilising
throughout your studies in health. The
Adelaide Health Simulation is the most
technologically advanced simulation
facility in Australasia and the only
Australian simulation facility
accredited with the Society for Simulation in Healthcare. Adelaide Health
Simulation was designed to accommodate
the needs of university undergraduate
medical, nursing and other health
sciences students.
The Ray Last laboratories which are
located within the Adelaide Medical
School encompass both surgical skills
and anatomy areas. They have been
designed to service a wide range of uses
from undergraduate and postgraduate
teaching in anatomy to advanced surgical
training simulation clinical skills and
research. Linked to the Adelaide Medical
School and the Ray Last laboratories is
the body donation program. The Adelaide
Medical School operates a central
mortuary facility on behalf of the three
universities in South Australia for the
acceptance of all bodies donated to
science. The opportunity for our students to
be able to dissect the human body is a
real privilege not available in many
parts of the world and our students
really believe that this is a really
important part of their learning. The
Adelaide Health and Medical Sciences
building or better known as AHMS is our
flagship teaching and research facility
and home to the Adelaide Medical School, Adelaide Dental School, Adelaide Nursing School,
School of Public Health and the Robinson
Research Institute. The building is situated
in the heart of the largest health and
biomedical precinct in the southern
hemisphere alongside the Royal Adelaide
Hospital and the South Australian Health
and Medical Research Institute or SAHMRI. It houses 1,700 of our health students
and 600 of our researchers. The
simulation through Adelaide Health
Simulation reflects a clinical
environment where students are required
to assess, troubleshoot, propose and
perform the correct treatment and
procedures on a patient. These scenarios
include the use of high-technology
mannequins or actors, we call them
standardised patients, that play the
role of a patient or a relative.
Simulation really helps you learn how to
treat and deal with patients when you're
diagnosing them as you've got the
opportunity to make errors without
causing harm and to observe the outcomes
of those different actions. The human
simulators produce lung, heart and bowel
sounds, have anatomically correct pulses
and respond to medical and pharmacological
interventions appropriately.
I really enjoy psychology in high school
and I think because of that that really
is what started my interest in it and I
thought straight away that I was going
to do psychology further in university.
My favourite parts about the degree are
definitely the amount of flexibility it
allows a lot of the lectures you'll find
are both online and in-person so it
really helps if you've got a part-time
job or other commitments. So far I've
taken electives mostly within the
neuroscience domain so I've also worked
in The Ray Last labs down in the HMS
building and it really shows you how the
theories that you're learning apply to
the real body, the real person. I love the
research component in Honours so as part
of our degree 50% of our mark is our
thesis which is a lot of independently
structured learning because you get to
choose what sort of study you want to
do on what area and what design as well.
I guess my favourite thing about the
whole degree was that I get to add to
the literature and help other people. I
think the degree has really helped me
prepare for the future in the way that
has helped me explore all these
different facets of psychology that I
had never considered previously and you
really get to see the way that
psychology is integrated into the world
more than you think.
Hello, I'm Lynn Ward and I'm a lecturer
here in the School of Psychology at the
University of Adelaide. I want to talk to
you today about the programs that we
offer why you might study psychology and
where it might take you. Let's start off
with what is psychology? Psychology is
both a discipline, a scientific
discipline which focuses on 'Why do
people think feel and act the way they
do?' How can we bring scientific
techniques to help us understand human
behaviour? Right down from the level of
what happens in the brain to what
happens between groups of people when
they're acting together, up to the global
context. So psychology is a discipline
that helps us to understand that. You
might be listening to this talk because
you're curious about understanding
people? Psychology is also an area of
professional practice so perhaps you're
listening to this talk because you have
some idea that you'd like to go on and
become a Psychologist when you've
finished studying. Our programs are
accredited which means that if you study
psychology at the University of Adelaide
you'll be able to go on and study
elsewhere as well anywhere in Australia.
If you do an undergraduate degree you
can go on and do Honours and if you do
an Honours degree you can go on and do a
Master's degree where you can apply to
do a master's degree anywhere in
Australia and this is really important.
Let's think about where psychology can
take you, you may be listening here
because you're working in an area
already
where you think you can enhance your
employability in your skills by looking
at what psychology can bring, so perhaps
you're someone who has a degree and
you're coming back to study, or perhaps
you're someone who's still at school and
you're completing year 11 or year 12 and
you are thinking about some of the
courses that you've done at school but
you might want to continue. Perhaps
you've started to study psychology at
high school. It's not essential that you
have done psychology at high school if
you want to come to university but I'm
sure that you're at least curious about
that question 'Why do people think, feel
and act the way they do?' Okay if we're
looking at the employability
picture the outlook for psychology is
very strong, we know that our graduates
get jobs in a range of areas that I'm
going to speak to you about as this talk
progresses, but we do know that many of
the jobs of the future are unclear we
don't know what they're going to involve
but the types of skills that you're
going to get by studying a psychology
degree are going to fit you very well
for jobs in the future. These are likely
to involve creativity, critical thinking,
problem-solving, communication and to be
people centered and as you'll see these
are all the skills that you're going to
develop if you follow a degree with us
here at Adelaide University. So let's
move on then and take a look at two of
our programs. At the University of
Adelaide we offer two undergraduate
programs that people can come into
straight from school. The Bachelor of
Psychological Science is a three year
degree and the Bachelor of Psychology
(Advanced Honours) is a four-year degree.
These courses have a very similar core
in what they're equipping you with so
some of the content overlaps in these
two programs but then they diverge a
little bit so I'm going to start to tell
you about the Bachelor of Psychological
Science and from there we'll look at
what it does that's different to the
other program and then I'll move on to
the Bachelor of Psychology (Advanced
Honours) and show you how that course
is a little bit different as well. So if
we're looking at the Bachelor
Psychological Science you can see as we
introduced earlier that is about
learning about different areas of human
development and behaviour. How do people
perceive the world around them? What are
the individual differences that people
have? How do they process emotions? What motivates people? This basic degree will
introduce you to these concepts and some
ways of understanding those. If you do
this Bachelor of Psychological Science
degree, you'll learn how to administer
some simple tests so right from first
year we're focusing on applying the
knowledge that you get, not just
understanding and doing research to find
out more, but applying these in a
real-world setting
so right from level one
psychology you start looking at what
sort of skills and applications there
are as you progress you'll get
scaffolded through different levels of
the content so you'll learn how to
search the library to find new
information, you'll learn how to do
statistics and to design research
studies and you'll go from being
introduced to those topics that we
mentioned, to go on to a much higher
level of study over the years and we'll
scaffold you up. Our program is very
flexible in that you can choose a number
of different pathways within it, so one
benefit of studying the Bachelor
Psychological Science is that there's
scope within that degree to do a second
major I'm going to talk about second
majors in a little while but let's just
say at this point the Bachelor of
Psychological Science is the first step
on a pathway to a career in psychology
and to having that broad understanding
of human behaviour that we talked about
before. So what's involved? Well it's a
three year degree and that means that
you have to do eight courses each year
in first-year psychology four of those
are electives so you get to choose what
you'd like to do. The other four are the
core psychology courses that everyone in
this degree does, so two of those
introduce you to psychology. One of them
introduces you to research methods and
the fourth one is what we call unique
content to this degree, so you only get
to do this subject if you do the
Bachelor of Psychological Science and
that subject is called, Psychology Skills
and Applications. In year two, there are
five core psychology subjects. So four of
these psychology subjects are the ones
that everybody does in this program and
in the Bachelor of Psychology (Advanced)
program, but the fifth one is unique to
this course this one is called
Psychology and Perspectives on Global
issues. It's called big-picture
psychology. So it focuses on the global
context and what can psychology do or
how can it respond to big-picture
questions like global movements of
people and refugees, like global warming
and climate change. So it's about
applying psychology in a global
context. If you're doing a double major
you might choose to do subjects that are
relevant there in second year and if
you're just focusing on psychology you
can choose whichever electives you like
as the rest of your second year courses.
Now in year three, you have to do four
psychology courses in order to be
eligible to complete the program but if
you like psychology and you want to do
six, you can do that too. If you're doing
a double major though half of your
degree at level three i.e.
four courses would be made up of the
double major courses. So you would do
half psychology and half that other
program and that will give you two
strings to your bow when you graduate.
What else is special about the Bachelor
of Psychological Science that you can
only do in this degree? Well we talked
about applications and this program has
an internship. It's an elective course
which means you don't have to do it but
if you want to in either second or third
year you can do an elective course which
takes you into an internship position
out in the community. Now what happens at the end of that three years? Might you be
able to get a job ? Yes indeed you can, if
you choose to leave after three years
you'll have a very good grounding in
understanding human behaviour and in
applying scientific approaches and in
communicating and doing teamwork and
critical thinking skills and these are
all sought after in the community. So you
can see there from that list of career
options a lot of these jobs are built
around people oriented communication,
problem solving and research areas so
some of the job titles for example might
be youth worker, or rehabilitation
officer or you may go into a marketing
company or human resources. Many of the
career options also depend a little bit
on what your second major was, so for
example you may have done marketing or
management as a second major and that
might influence where you go to work.
Other people might go on after this
degree and do further qualifications in
another area so for example perhaps
you'll do teaching and you'll go and
become a psychology teacher. Let's have a
closer look at some of those majors
because I haven't really explained what they are yet.
You can see here from the table some of
the areas that you could study alongside
your psychology degree to get another
area of specialisation, so you can get a
flavour for the types of courses by
looking across the disciplines, so for
example there are Arts subjects like
Philosophy or Language studies or Music
there are also science-based subjects
like Microbiology. Perhaps you would like to do
Criminology and Psychology at the same
time or Addiction Studies. Let's take a
look at a few more, there are actually 35
majors that you can do in Psychology so
this is just giving you a little taste.
So perhaps you'll pair Psychology with
Sociology, or perhaps you'll pair it with
Genetics. Really the choice is yours but
this is certainly one of the flexible
and adaptive ways that we allow you to
combine your psychology degree with
something else that might interest you
and increase your employability. So the
degree aims then are, for you to develop
some critical thinking skills, for you to
develop research skills and digital and
statistical literacy so that you can
apply research skills to understanding
problems and to develop new knowledge,
and also to apply that knowledge from an
evidence based perspective. You're also
going to learn how to write and
communicate, not just with academics, not in just "How can I write an
essay?" But also "How can I communicate
with other professionals?" So you'll learn
how to write research reports. You'll also learn how to communicate with the
general public for example, so perhaps
you'll learn how to communicate complex
psychological constructs and concepts in
a form that other people can understand.
They are really important skills that
you're going to develop. Critically this
degree aims to teach you about a broad
range of areas that are critical to our
accreditation body. Now you can see from
that list that psychology equips you to
understand or to study things right down
from the micro level of the individual
so biological basis of why people think
they act the way they
do. Right up to individual differences
for example in intelligence or
personality, it looks at how do people
develop across the lifespan so how do we
change and how do we stay the same from
childhood right through to old age. We
also have a focus on Indigenous
knowledges - and cross-cultural
psychology because we want to produce
graduates at the end who have cultural
competency. We have research courses
there and a focus of those also is on
ethical behaviour and ethical practices.
So you're going to come out with a very
broad understanding that you can then
take and with those skills that we've
talked about in communication and
problem-solving you'll be able to take
this broad area of knowledge and
understanding and apply it to solving
problems. I've mentioned already that our
teaching is flexible and we use a range
of different techniques in this
program so we have online lectures we
have small group tutorials we have
face-to-face lectures we focus on
problem solving and we provide workshops
that will scaffold you through the
knowledge that you need to develop. Let's
see then what the other pathway was that
you could have considered. If you
remember I said there were two
undergraduate pathways the one I'm going
to mention now is the Bachelor of Psychology
Advanced Honours. How is it the same and
how is it different from The Bachelor of
Psychological Science? Well, what they
have in common is there are overlapping
courses in the first three years so
there are core courses that you need to
do in each of these programs where
you'll do them together, so for example
in first-year Psychology 1A and 1B which
introduce you to the topic overall, are
done by people in both programs. In level
2, we have courses that offer you
foundational understanding of perception
and cognition, of social psychology, of
research methods and of human
development and mental health and again
if you did this program the Bachelor
of Psychology Advanced Honors, you
would do those courses alongside The
Bachelor of Psychological Science
students but this degree is quite
different in its focus. The courses that
you will do in addition to those, are focused very much on
high-level problem-solving and
leadership. Developing advanced research
skills and focusing on the international
context in a slightly different way. The
other thing that distinguishes this
program is at the end of The Bachelor of
Psychological Science degree at three
years you can graduate and leave or if
you want to you can apply to do an
honours year. The Bachelor of Psychology
(Advanced Honours) is aimed at very high
achieving students at the end of their
high school career and if you can
maintain a good grade point average
throughout the program it's a four-year
degree which means you complete the
three years and then you automatically
enter the honours year and the honours
year is one where you get to focus on a
research project to do advanced level
coursework and to develop more applied
leadership skills. It also prepares you
for a Masters level course, so at the
end of the four-year Bachelor of
Psychology (Advanced Honours) program you
can apply to go directly into one of the
master's programs that I'll mention to
you in a little while. You can see there
that the entry requirements are very
high so typically it's a 95 ATAR, and while
you're in the program you need to
maintain those grades in order to hold
that place in Honours so you don't need
to apply for that fourth year it's part
of this basic degree. So you'll develop
lots of advanced research skills in this
particular program you'll learn how to
apply these skills and you'll develop
leadership and have an opportunity to
target some of the projects that you do
in your program to areas that interest
you specifically.
Another thing that distinguishes this
program from the other undergraduate
program is it really does focus on
psychology. So in first year and second
year as you can see in this slide you do
four core courses in psychology and
electives at first year and five core
courses and three electives at second
year that's similar to what
you were doing in the undergraduate
degree that's the Bachelor of
Psychological Science, where they differ
is in level three particularly. All the
subjects that you do in psychology and
level three are just psychology. There's
no room in this program for a second
major. This is a program that really
suits people who know what they want to
do when they're coming into an
undergraduate degree, people who are
really focused on psychology and they
just want to do that. Let's take a closer
look at what's involved in first year
then, so your four core courses are
Psychology 1A and 1B in research methods
but also of course specialists to this
particular program and it's called
Technology in Psychology Research and
Practice, so you're going to be looking
at how psychology can adapt and use
technology including computers and
telecommunication in its research and in
practical applications and you can see
nowadays this is very very relevant
tele-psychology has become a booming area of research and practice especially with
current pandemic conditions that we have. In
level two again you'll do the four core
courses that other students do but you
have a unique course here that focuses
on international psychology so this is
looking at the global context on
cultural competency and cultural
intelligence and this is a course that
will allow you to develop high level
skills in this area that will make you
highly employable and will develop those
research and leadership skills that can
be applied in a more global context. Your
level three as I said is all psychology
and there are two courses there that are
unique to your program and these are
called Advanced Career and Research
Skills, so these are directly targeted at
developing employability skills and also
advanced level research in addition to
what other students might have done in
their three year degree. You can see the
career options here again some people
choose to leave after level three but
others who go on to this four-year
program can go in at
a higher level and they can be prepared
for a Masters entry course. So some of
these courses are around human resource
management around mental health services
around government policy and
communication jobs. So students who leave
after level four may choose to go into
one of those areas or they may choose to
stay on and follow a professional
pathway either to become a professional
psychologist or to do research in a Ph.D
program. So that fourth year then that
Honours year the one that is available
within this program as part of that four
year structure and that other students
need to apply for at the end of their
three year degree provides you with an
opportunity of doing advanced level
psychology coursework but most
importantly you get a chance to do a
research project and to develop research
skills in area of your interest. So our
school is very much focused on a
teaching and research nexus that means
our teachers are active researchers and
they bring their research knowledge and
their expertise in those areas into the
teaching field and so you'll be studying
and learning and working alongside
people who are active researchers. The
three main areas in our school for
research and teaching are health
disability and lifespan, development
brain and cognition and also the social
and organisational stream. So when you
get to Honours you'll be doing a research
project in one of these areas, you'll be
doing advanced coursework and you'll
also be developing more of those applied
skills. Okay this slide will give you a
pictorial representation what that
journey might look like that I've been
trying to explain to you. You can see
here the undergraduate pathways that I
mentioned at the very beginning, you
could be coming from high school and
going straight into a Bachelor of
Psychological Science - a three year
degree. At the end of that three year
degree if your grades are competitive
you could apply to do the Honours a year
and then after the Honours year you could
apply to
to a master's program to become a
professional psychologist or to do a
research degree with a PhD. Perhaps
you've achieved very highly at high
school and you want to go straight into
the Bachelor of Psychology (Advanced
Honours), perhaps you're not interested in
a second major and you just want to
focus on psychology, in that case if you
maintain your grades, you follow that
four-year pathway. I've indicated to you
that those two programs are
distinguished by the additional unique
content courses that each offers you. So
the Bachelor of Psychological Science, it
was around the internship and skills and
applications and big-picture psychology
applying psychological perspectives to
global issues and the possibility of
doing a second major in getting a second
string to your bow. With the Bachelor of
Psychology (Advanced Honours) it was about
a special unique experience to develop
leadership and high-level research
skills and to focus much more on
psychology. Now that final pathway there
the graduate entry pathway that you can
see, this is for people who already have
a degree of some form and perhaps are
already out there working. These people
are interested in coming back and
preparing for honors and getting some
undergraduate psychology under their
belt. And so they can do that in one year
so they can get some credit for what
they've previously done towards
electives and they don't need to do a
whole degree. They can just do the one
year focused psychology course to get
that Bachelor of Psychological Science
through that graduate entry program and
then again if their grades are competitive
they can apply to go on to Honours. So
what happens at the next level down? What
happens if you choose to stay and study
further rather than leaving now and
getting a job at the end of your three
or four years? Well University of Adelaide
offers three accredited master's level
programs. If you want to be a registered
psychologist you need to complete an
accredited master's degree. Here are the
three that we offer, we offer a Master of
Psychology (Clinical), a Master of
Psychology (Health) and a Master of
Psychology (Organisation on Human
factors.) Well are they similar? Are they
different? What do they involve? At their
core they have a focus on advanced level
coursework, placement opportunities that
are requirements for that degree, a
research project so that you learn to
apply again your research skills to
these professional areas of life and
there are some basic teaching that is
similar across them so teaching around
ethics and research and testing. These
core content subjects are covered in
those three programs but after that
they're quite distinct and they're quite
different in their focus. You may have
heard of a Master of Psychology Clinical
this may be the one that most people are
familiar with. A clinical psychologist
focuses on mental health and well-being,
so these are specialists who learn to
diagnose and treat and promote areas
associated with mental health concerns.
Anxiety, depression, enhancing people's
performance, enhancing their capacity and
to operate in their
environments but specifically focused on
mental health and well-being. A Master of
Psychology (Health) is slightly different
this focuses more on the relationship
between psychological processes and
health, so for example how does psychology
apply in a health context? The final one
there the organisational and human
factors masters, this focuses not so much
on working with individuals like the
other to do, people who do this program
are much more likely to end up in a work
environment or an organisation and the
focus there is on the well-being of the
organisation, understanding how to
enhance people's performance in that
environment. So they might be involved in
recruitment and selection of people into
particular roles, they may focus on
understanding managerial culture or
workplace culture.
Perhaps they'll be looking at how to
change your work environments and how to
manage change. So the focus you see is
slightly different they still have a
background in research in ethics and in
those core areas of assessment but now
the focus is more on an organisational
context and the human factors part which
is one of the areas that Adelaide University
specialises in, might concern
topics like decision making, "how do
people make decisions in complex
environments?." So you see there's probably
something for everyone in the psychology
courses that we're offering at the
University of Adelaide in terms of the
breadth of content that we cover and the
depth of content that we cover. The
skills that we're helping you to develop
to go on either for further study or to
enhance your employability, and the
pathways that we provide for
professional development or research
training degrees. So we're going to
finish here with one of our graduates,
Angus studied the Bachelor of
Psychological Science and you can see
what he had to say, he chose it because
he was "interested in how humans think
and behave." What he really liked was the
flexibility of our program and that he
could tailor it to his interests and
that he had lots of career options for
his future. I hope that what I've talked
to you today about has given you a bit
of a flavour for that content and I hope
that if you have any questions on our
program and what we can offer and where
you can go with us I do hope you'll
follow those up and I do hope to see a
lot of you in our undergraduate courses
going forward. Thank you so much.
We're very blessed in Adelaide to have a
strong learning environment and culture.
Both staff and students are very
supportive of everyone reaching a
certain standard and the exciting thing
about working in health is that you're
always a part of a team. Now that I'm in
second year I signed up to become a peer
mentor which means I can interact with
first-year students to help them feel
more comfortable as they transition into
uni life. There's a buddy mentorship program
that I've met people through and when I
was in younger years they'd help
support me and inspire me and they've
honestly almost become like my family in
a way. When I was looking for guidance on
my subjects in about year two I spoke to
the support staff in the Helen Mayo
building and they really helped me
figure out what was best for me
academically but also for my future
careers. It was really good knowing and
I'm not alone and I have got support
from the actual faculty. The cohort I
went through with, are really great we're
a supportive group, we have a
facebook chat and we organised catch up's
coffee dates and we study together
which i think is really important
especially coming up to exams it's great
to have that support network and that
study framework to. What I found from the
first day up until this last year is
that the lecturers are actually there
for us and they actually really love to
help us and they're always there for any
questions. I was quite nervous moving
interstate to study this degree but I
was reassured within the first week
that I was well supported by lots of
colleagues and like-minded people and
there was lots of events as well that
help me build some lifelong friendships.
The University of Adelaide has a really
important Career Service which can help
you increase your employability, find
opportunities and learn career ready
skills to plan for your future. You
have free access to an online platform
called Career Hub, and Career Hub is
accessible from enrolment up to one year
after you graduate, so it's a great way
to prepare you for the workforce. In the
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
we have a really strong student support
service for you, so when you're made an
offer into the Faculty of Health Medical
Sciences we encourage you to make a time
to meet with us so that we can make sure
that you have everything in place to
begin your studies. Think of this as a
one-stop shop to be able to answer your
questions and get help along the way
should you need it. You're very welcome
to come as many times as you like
throughout your time with us. I really
encourage you to look into our Peer
Mentoring Program as you start
University. This program is free, it runs
in semester one and semester two, and
it's an informal way to meet other
students, learn about campus life, engage
in activities and events, have your
questions answered and to receive
ongoing peer support. Our peer mentors
know exactly what it's like from
personal experience to be a new student
they've already been in your shoes. So
they're really high performing students
eager to share insider information to
help guide you through university life.
The groups meet face to face, online and
events and activities. So make sure you
access the information on our website
and I'd really encourage you to select
your mentor and join this wonderful program.
Through the Yaitya Purruna Indigenous Health Unit we have support services available, specifically for our
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
students we also have a dedicated
Indigenous Student Support Officer
available to provide tailored
application support to you. We offer a
full range of scholarships to new
students and further details can be
found on the scholarship section of the
University website. We really encourage
you to look through and apply for each
and every one that you're eligible for.
Sometimes believe it or not
scholarships go unawarded so we
really keen for you to apply for
everything that you feel that you'd be
eligible for that could help you settle
into University.
You may have heard of the Headstart
program for those of you who are in your
final years of school.
It's a program whereby you can replace
some of your year 12 subjects with
university courses so check the
University website search 'Headstart'
or your careers counsellor at school
will have some further information for
you as well. We really encourage you to
look into the opportunities to study
overseas during your time at University
it can really help you to diversify your
study and to look at things from the
global perspective. So make sure you
check out the information on the Study
Overseas website to find out more.
We'd love you to keep in touch with us
throughout the rest of this year and
more importantly we really hope to see
you as a student in health with us in
the years to come. I hope you've enjoyed
the session today please make sure you
register for our live Q&A session which
is coming up shortly. Thanks for joining
me today, bye for now.
