Guide to Universities - reference book?
A little chunk of The Student Room reserved exclusively for the parents and guardians of university applicants.
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Guide to Universities - reference book?
Has anyone used this and found it useful (or a previous years version)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/HEAP-2013-Un.../ref=pd_cp_b_0 -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?All Heap's books are good and useful, bit they're also very expensive and go out of date very quickly. If your school is halfway decent, it should have copies of them in the library. Use that and save a lot of money.(Original post by Nervous Mum)
Has anyone used this and found it useful (or a previous years version)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/HEAP-2013-Un.../ref=pd_cp_b_0 -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?Brain Heap is to university admissions rather what Crick and Watson are to DNA or Michael Ventris to Linear B.(Original post by Nervous Mum)
Has anyone used this and found it useful (or a previous years version)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/HEAP-2013-Un.../ref=pd_cp_b_0
Heap is the man who figured out how universities made offers back in the days when universities kept their admissions requirements secret. -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?
I'm sure it's very good as a reference material, but only really for entry requirements. Whether to go full-time/part-time and what course to study (two of the four things it claims to offer) I'd say are far more down to an applicant's own wants and needs than a book could detail.
I could be wrong mind.. -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?What did he manage to figure out?(Original post by nulli tertius)
Brain Heap is to university admissions rather what Crick and Watson are to DNA or Michael Ventris to Linear B.
Heap is the man who figured out how universities made offers back in the days when universities kept their admissions requirements secret.
And why would a university keep admissions requirements secret anyway? -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?All manner of reasons which have disappeared into the mists of time. University admission was as closed a shop as the Freemasons when I applied to university. Brian Heap has made, I hope, a large sum of money out of his (very expensive) books because there was a long, long time when nobody had access to any information that today's students take for granted, except for what they could glean from Mr Heap. It used to be like putting a message in a bottle and sending it out into the sea and hoping it got picked up. On the plus side, you didn't have to write a personal statement, so it wasn't all bad.(Original post by Smack)
What did he manage to figure out?
And why would a university keep admissions requirements secret anyway? -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?Ooh maybe that's a sign. Francis Crick was initially educated at the same school as my son.(Original post by nulli tertius)
Brain Heap is to university admissions rather what Crick and Watson are to DNA or Michael Ventris to Linear B.
Heap is the man who figured out how universities made offers back in the days when universities kept their admissions requirements secret. -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?Oooooooh my baby girl to(Original post by Nervous Mum)
Ooh maybe that's a sign. Francis Crick was initially educated at the same school as my son.
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Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?yes, presumably same yr as your son since she is also investigating universities(Original post by Nervous Mum)
Your baby girl as a sixth former? -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?He probably knows her then as there are only about 50 girls, assuming your daughter is lower sixth.(Original post by TenOfThem)
yes, presumably same yr as your son since she is also investigating universities
They have it better than I did, I went to an all girls school and they let boys in when I was in 5th year (Year 11), unfortunately the boys were 1st years (year 7).Last edited by Nervous Mum; 14-07-2012 at 23:03. -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?This is a a period piece, a 1972 newspaper clipping (it is from The Times Digital Archive-I haven't saved it for 40 years!).(Original post by Smack)
What did he manage to figure out?
And why would a university keep admissions requirements secret anyway?
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Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?
Can you imagine Warwick CCE now. I think for my son's degree course they want
A*A*A + Step.
I know they say the 'A' levels are easier nowadays but I know that my son is finding it hard going, I think he is hoping for an A for Maths and a B for Further Maths. -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?I am wondering when "usual" requirements became a standard element in the prospectus(Original post by nulli tertius)
This is a a period piece, a 1972 newspaper clipping
Certainly by 1978 when I was applying the prospectuses gave an indication -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?I think it was fairly quickly realised that non-publication was unsustainable once there was reasonably accurate unofficial information.(Original post by TenOfThem)
I am wondering when "usual" requirements became a standard element in the prospectus
Certainly by 1978 when I was applying the prospectuses gave an indication
It does mark one stage in change in the relationship from supplicant and benefactor to customer and supplier. -
Re: Guide to Universities - reference book?God bless Mr Heap and all the little Heaps. English at Manchester was BBC in 1977, when I went.(Original post by nulli tertius)
This is a a period piece, a 1972 newspaper clipping (it is from The Times Digital Archive-I haven't saved it for 40 years!).