Contact the relevant institution for more information. Your offer information will explain acceptance and enrolment dates, and procedures at the institution making the offer, so you should follow these instructions carefully.
If you don't accept your offer by the date given, your offer will lapse. International applicants: Once you have accepted your offer and paid the required fees, the institution will send you a Confirmation of Enrolment CoE.
This document will allow you to obtain your student visa. To authorise someone to accept an offer on your behalf, contact the relevant institution. Contact the relevant institution for advice as enrolment dates and procedures differ for each institution. Institutions decide who they will make offers to. UAC doesn't select applicants and doesn't have the power to persuade institutions to make a particular offer or to question decisions made by institutions.
If you have questions about the selection process, contact the admissions office at the relevant institution. You can also ask them about the study options that may be available to you. If you don't receive an offer at all for semester 1 , we'll advise you of this after January Round 2, February Round 1 or February Round 2 depending on when you applied.
You won't receive an unsuccessful letter if you received an offer in any round up to and including these rounds. If you don't receive an offer at all for semester 2 , and you don't have any preferences for semester 1 next year, we'll advise you of this after June Round 2 and July Round 2. If you are not made any offers for admission throughout the year, we'll email you after the February and March rounds.
You can accept your new offer before withdrawing your enrolment from the first institution. However, ensure you follow the institution's procedures for withdrawing your enrolment by the appropriate census date, otherwise you'll be charged fees. Some institutions may make a slipback offer to a pathway lower level course if you're not eligible or competitive enough for the courses for which you've applied.
Read more about pathways to university. There are several offer rounds throughout the year. Check the undergraduate key dates for the details of all offer rounds. Most applicants will receive their offers once end-of-year results are known.
Some institutions may make a limited number of early offers to certain applicants, including:. After January Round 1 there are more offer rounds for study in semester 1.
However, not all institutions make offers in these rounds and not all courses will still have vacancies. Read more about undergraduate offers. You can only receive one offer in each offer round. If you receive an offer in one round and accept it, and then receive an offer in a later round, you can choose either to:. Read about changing your preferences after you receive an offer.
But keep in mind that your course preferences are considered in the order in which you've listed them. Read more about changing your undergraduate course preferences. Accept your offer. If you don't accept it and you don't receive an offer in a future round, you may miss out on studying at university this year.
Accepting your offer doesn't stop you from being considered in future offer rounds unless it is your first preference. No, even if an institution is making some offers in an early round, it may not be making any offers to the course you have listed as your first preference. Therefore, if you are eligible and competitive enough, it can make you an offer to that preference in a later offer round.
For example, if you have consecutive preferences say 1, 2 and 3 for the same institution in an early offer round and you get an offer to preference 3, you may have missed out on an offer to preferences 1 and 2 not because you're not eligible, but because the institution is not making offers to that course until later offer rounds.
Accepting an offer to a lower course preference doesn't stop you from being considered for your higher course preferences in later offer rounds. Most offers to Year 12 applicants will be made after ATARs are released in December, but there are many offer rounds throughout the year. Check the international key dates for the details of all offer rounds. Your courses are considered in the order you have listed them in your application. However, each institution you have applied to will consider your application separately.
Therefore, you can receive an offer to your highest preference at each institution included in your application if you are eligible and competitive enough. For example, if you list six courses, all for Western Sydney University, in your application, you will only receive one offer — from Western Sydney University — to the highest course listed for which you are eligible and competitive enough.
If you list six courses, three for Macquarie University and three for the University of Newcastle, you will receive two offers — one to the highest course listed at Macquarie University for which you are eligible and competitive enough, and one to the highest course listed at the University of Newcastle for which you are eligible and competitive enough.
You could get up to five offers from your UCAS choices and you can hold onto any offer you get until you make a decision. Then you have to choose which one s you want to accept. You can decline all your offers if you realise you've made a mistake in your choice of subject and want to look for another subject in UCAS Extra or Clearing.
Most students accept one of their offers as their firm acceptance to make sure they have a place in the bag depending on grade requirements of a conditional offer. Assuming you have conditional offers, you'll have to balance your desire to attend a particular university against whether you think you can meet the conditions when making your Firm Acceptance. Most applicants with more than one offer choose an Insurance Acceptance as well.
If you're accepted by your Firm choice, the Insurance choice becomes irrelevant.
0コメント