Re: Newly grad Filipino nurse wanting to work in Australia/New Zealand
To maeriz & Vanessa81:
Pre-registration Nursing degrees' costs varies from state to state. Yearly tuition ranges from 18k-23k AUD. That is tuition alone - books and all other materials and uniforms are not yet included. And then you need approximately 15k AUD per year for your accommodation, food, transpo, school materials (including photocopies, books, uniform, etc.), and other miscellaneous things.
A lot of the Universities have accommodation for students. You can choose to stay in their accommodation or you can live out with others. If someone else you know is going to study in the same uni, I suggest you just rent outside. Some accommodation of Unis are catered (meaning you don't have to worry about food, they'll provide it). Sydney accos are pretty much on the high end, Brisbane though is way more cheaper. I'm pretty much familiar with the unis and accommodation prices and stuff in both Sydney and Brisbane as those are my target. I'm not so familiar with Melbourne though.
Workload in the Uni? I'm not quite sure but to me it seems that their workload is much lighter compared to that in the Philippines. I based this on my workload in my previous Uni. They have 4-5 subjects per sem, we had 6-7 per sem.

They are only required to go to classes 12-15 hours per week, we were required at least 25++ hours per week worth of lectures alone (haha :P). Add the duty hours per week which is 16-24 hours so yea you get the picture. I'm not sure if their clinical placements need you to complete certain cases like what we had to do which added more load to our normal schedule! Remember the completion days? Oh my... my schedule became 7 days a week and many sleepless nights just to finish reports and thesis lol. The assignments are mostly paperworks like essays and reports. I really think Filipinos will be okay, especially nursing in the Philippines is really hard. We had a quota grade in my uni before but in Australia there's none - I mean you just need to get a pass unlike in some unis in the Philippines, you have to get a really good grade for you to stay in the program. You also don't get kicked out of the program if you fail one subject, unlike in my uni if you fail one subject, goodbye to you

. So yea, I'm sure we'll make it there.

We just have to work hard for it.
When you are on a student visa, you are permitted to work for 20 hours per week only. You can only start working upon commencement of classes. The 20 hours apply only when you are having your classes. During summer or semestral breaks or holidays, you can work unlimited hours.
There are two types of pre-registration courses: a 1 year and 2 years program. If you take the 2 years course, you will be eligible to apply for a skilled independent visa (resident) after you graduate and receive your registration from the nurses board. If however, you don't meet the other criteria in the visa (e.g. the 1 year related experience while you were in Australia), you can apply for the graduate visa which will allow you to stay for another 18 months to comply with the requirements for the Skilled Independent Visa. The Independent visa doesn't need an agency to sponsor you, you apply for it yourself. This is also a resident visa not a business type visa. Resident visas are good for 5 years. You can apply for citizenship after 3-4 years. This however, doesn't apply to the 1 year program as the minimum requirement for both visas is finishing a course for 2 years.
I hope that helps. If there's anything else you need, just ask me.
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