I would be really grateful is someone could help me out
I have just completed one IGCSE in ICT, I have to do another (at least 3) I was thinking English, Math, and Business studies. can anyone recommend the best way of studying them independently and any resources i might use. also possibly a 5th subject that may suite along those lines. (or do you think 4 would be enough for a college)
I would be really grateful is someone could help me out
I have just completed one IGCSE in ICT, I have to do another (at least 3) I was thinking English, Math, and Business studies. can anyone recommend the best way of studying them independently and any resources i might use. also possibly a 5th subject that may suite along those lines. (or do you think 4 would be enough for a college)
Thanks Appreciate it! James
Hi! I've just finished my igcses and I would definitely recommend doing a 5th igcse as some jobs and colleges need 5 gcse (or igcse) passes at A*-C. Maths and English Language are compulsory, a good 5th subject might be a humanities like geography or history. You could also do a science igcse or a double award science if you want. Also a another igcse subject would widen your choices for a level. I would recommend getting the exam board book for that subject and learning out of that, for example, I have an Edexcel igcse geography book because I was doing my geography igcse with the Edexcel board. Always refer closely to the syllabus in case the book has missed something out. Use the internet for resources, I used it to get better case studies for geography (I don't why I keep using geography as my main example lol ). Hope this helps!
Thank-You! that is really helpful. The college I am considering is Cambridge regional college studying the 1 year diploma, along side an external candidate A level Business studies and ICT. the entry requirements for Cambs is 4 GCSE's grade a*-c (at least) I also have 5 years of references from working as an IT Consultant, I have a industry recognised qualification that governs IT professions (CompTIA A+) im also taking various modules with Microsoft training. I think with maybe 1 extra GCSE (I hope and pray) my application will be strong enough because it is a respected college. I think I would struggle with history or geography is there anything relating to perhaps sound engineering? something along those lines?
Hi! I've just finished my igcses and I would definitely recommend doing a 5th igcse as some jobs and colleges need 5 gcse (or igcse) passes at A*-C. Maths and English Language are compulsory, a good 5th subject might be a humanities like geography or history. You could also do a science igcse or a double award science if you want. Also a another igcse subject would widen your choices for a level. I would recommend getting the exam board book for that subject and learning out of that, for example, I have an Edexcel igcse geography book because I was doing my geography igcse with the Edexcel board. Always refer closely to the syllabus in case the book has missed something out. Use the internet for resources, I used it to get better case studies for geography (I don't why I keep using geography as my main example lol ). Hope this helps!
Thank-You! that is really helpful. The college I am considering is Cambridge regional college studying the 1 year diploma, along side an external candidate A level Business studies and ICT. the entry requirements for Cambs is 4 GCSE's grade a*-c (at least) I also have 5 years of references from working as an IT Consultant, I have a industry recognised qualification that governs IT professions (CompTIA A+) im also taking various modules with Microsoft training. I think with maybe 1 extra GCSE (I hope and pray) my application will be strong enough because it is a respected college. I think I would struggle with history or geography is there anything relating to perhaps sound engineering? something along those lines?
Thanks James
Oh maybe physics igcse will be more your area? You could always try a language if you're good at them. I don't know if there are any igcses related to sound engineering, the closest I can think of is physics... I know there's an electronics gcse, not sure if it's available for igcse, perhaps you could look at all the subjects your exam board offers and decide from there.
Thank-You! that is really helpful. The college I am considering is Cambridge regional college studying the 1 year diploma, along side an external candidate A level Business studies and ICT. the entry requirements for Cambs is 4 GCSE's grade a*-c (at least) I also have 5 years of references from working as an IT Consultant, I have a industry recognised qualification that governs IT professions (CompTIA A+) im also taking various modules with Microsoft training. I think with maybe 1 extra GCSE (I hope and pray) my application will be strong enough because it is a respected college. I think I would struggle with history or geography is there anything relating to perhaps sound engineering? something along those lines?
Thanks James
I would go for physics too. I did Edexcel IGCSE separate science and CIE maths. I would also recommend the CGP revision guides. I found them more helpful than some of the teachers and all I did for revision was literally memorising them. The exams went well in general I think(waiting for results to come out), so it was at least workable lol.
Thanks for the advise, It sounds great but I think id find it a struggle, I'm not the brightest when it comes to English and Math so I'm going to find that a battle, what do you think the easies course is ?
I would go for physics too. I did Edexcel IGCSE separate science and CIE maths. I would also recommend the CGP revision guides. I found them more helpful than some of the teachers and all I did for revision was literally memorising them. The exams went well in general I think(waiting for results to come out), so it was at least workable lol.
Thanks for the advise, It sounds great but I think id find it a struggle, I'm not the brightest when it comes to English and Math so I'm going to find that a battle, what do you think the easies course is ?
Thanks James
The easiest course for me was maths, but the easiest exam I had was chemistry I think at this stage maths is really just about practice, you can find loads of past papers and mark schemes on the internet Probably get a workbook as well?
I definitely need to hunt down some resources, I have found a text book for IGCSE math but can't seem to find one for English, were did you study or was it mostly text books ?
I definitely need to hunt down some resources, I have found a text book for IGCSE math but can't seem to find one for English, were did you study or was it mostly text books ?
That link looks perfect, Your methods sound a lot like mine, I don't like to cramming text books, but prefer to be comfortable with what I (am pretty sure) will appear on the exam, I recently took an IGCSE for ICT, I didn't do any revision what so ever, just took a past paper, got good grades on that and went for it and I feel it went okay the questions were pretty much the same from the past paper!
So you would recommend using revision guides and how long do you think it could take me to be ready for the 3 ?
That link looks perfect, Your methods sound a lot like mine, I don't like to cramming text books, but prefer to be comfortable with what I (am pretty sure) will appear on the exam, I recently took an IGCSE for ICT, I didn't do any revision what so ever, just took a past paper, got good grades on that and went for it and I feel it went okay the questions were pretty much the same from the past paper!
So you would recommend using revision guides and how long do you think it could take me to be ready for the 3 ?
Thanks for your help
James
The 3 you mean maths, English and physics? I don't think it will take very long, at my school they finish 8-10 IGCSEs in one year ( for GCSEs it takes two years). So for only 3 subjects maybe a couple of months? It depends on what grades you are aiming for
The 3 you mean maths, English and physics? I don't think it will take very long, at my school they finish 8-10 IGCSEs in one year ( for GCSEs it takes two years). So for only 3 subjects maybe a couple of months? It depends on what grades you are aiming for
And also I wouldn't recommend sitting the Edexcel IGCSE exams in January unless you feel fairly confident about them. Many people retake their IGCSEs at this time of the year so the grade boundaries are usually higher. But if you feel confident then that's not a problem
Well actually i guess 4, it would be English, Math, Business studies and Physics I have until June next year to be ready and only around an hour a day to study do you think thats achievable ?
And also I wouldn't recommend sitting exams in January unless you are 100% confident. Many people retake their IGCSEs at this time of the year so the grade boundaries are usually higher. But if you feel confident then that's not a problem
Well actually i guess 4, it would be English, Math, Business studies and Physics I have until June next year to be ready and only around an hour a day to study do you think thats achievable ?
James
I didn't do business but someone who did told me it was quite straightforward, so probably won't take so long to prepare. One hour a day is probably a bit insufficient, but it all depends on what kind of foundation you already have. If you didn't find most topics totally unfamiliar it could be achievable, just spend more time on your weaker subjects
I would love to do more but (because I work) I'm probably going to find it near impossible, I considered going for a distance learning corse to structure my hours a little more but to be honest I think I'll find it difficult, I have abit of foundation for business a did a past paper and was 3 marks off a C , Math was pretty poor I got 22/100 , I Havnt done an English paper yet. I'm pretty determined so can put a lot of effort and time into revising (I can take my revision notes to work).
What do you think to the distance learning centres ?
I didn't do business but someone who did told me it was quite straightforward, so probably won't take so long to prepare. One hour a day is probably a bit insufficient, but it all depends on what kind of foundation you already have. If you didn't find most topics totally unfamiliar it could be achievable, just spend more time on your weaker subjects
I would love to do more but (because I work) I'm probably going to find it near impossible, I considered going for a distance learning corse to structure my hours a little more but to be honest I think I'll find it difficult, I have abit of foundation for business a did a past paper and was 3 marks off a C , Math was pretty poor I got 22/100 , I Havnt done an English paper yet. I'm pretty determined so can put a lot of effort and time into revising (I can take my revision notes to work).
What do you think to the distance learning centres ?
I don't know much about distance learning It sounds a good idea. Just keep working hard, I'm sure you will get whatever grades you've aimed for next year As for maths remember it's all about practice, practice, practice!