So I just went to pick up my results, and I saw this:
730212 1 2008 Legal Theory 085 H1
!!!!!
Whaaat. I was so sure I was going to fail that one.
Someone up there clearly loves me. Thank you, O Higher Beings. I appreciate the miracle.
3 thoughts on “What. The. Foucault.”
wow. congratulations!!
i’ve also viewed my results first thing in the morning.
im still not used to the uni marking system, so i almost went to pieces upon seeing that I got an H3 in one subject. almost.
oh well, that’s one semester down and 5 more to go.
that’s fantastic Suzanne! congratulations
Gianina: Yay, that’s your first semester of uni done :). But yeah, I got an H3 last semester, and my inner overachiever was a little bit displeased. Just remember – it’s still honours, you’re probably still in the top half of the class, and in the long run it won’t be a big deal.
I had an group interview for an internship not too long ago, and when asked to name a time they failed and what they did about it, almost everyone named a failed assignment, a bad grade, etc. So at the end of the interview, the interviewer, who was a prominent member of the Victorian Bar, went and said: ‘You know, we’re not worried about your grades. If you looked at the university transcripts of the interviewers at those law firms that insist on super-high grades… well, you’d stop worrying about your grades too.’
wow. congratulations!!
i’ve also viewed my results first thing in the morning.
im still not used to the uni marking system, so i almost went to pieces upon seeing that I got an H3 in one subject. almost.
oh well, that’s one semester down and 5 more to go.
that’s fantastic Suzanne! congratulations
Gianina: Yay, that’s your first semester of uni done :). But yeah, I got an H3 last semester, and my inner overachiever was a little bit displeased. Just remember – it’s still honours, you’re probably still in the top half of the class, and in the long run it won’t be a big deal.
I had an group interview for an internship not too long ago, and when asked to name a time they failed and what they did about it, almost everyone named a failed assignment, a bad grade, etc. So at the end of the interview, the interviewer, who was a prominent member of the Victorian Bar, went and said: ‘You know, we’re not worried about your grades. If you looked at the university transcripts of the interviewers at those law firms that insist on super-high grades… well, you’d stop worrying about your grades too.’
Georgie: thanks!