It's a real degree studied by white kids from the Home Counties. At least it was at Birmingham circa 2008.
It's not as prestigious as 'Oriental Studies' though.It's a real degree studied by white kids from the Home Counties. At least it was at Birmingham circa 2008.
It's not as prestigious as 'Oriental Studies' though.
Congratulations, and good for you on giving your perspective. I don't think we are having a go at your generation, justthe system that you are studying in.First time posting on here, but I think I can provide some useful insight.
I got my A Level results last week, confirmed my place for Oxford Brookes uni and will be studying history there in September.
I personally don't agree with much of the sentiment towards my generation going to uni. Lots of the people from my (state) school have rightfully earned the opportunity to go to university and get a degree. There is a lot of pressure on students in sixth form nowadays to go to uni, in order to increase the school's reputation. I feel it's grossly unfair to judge my generation as we are being just because we strive to do something we actually want to do.
I will, however, accept that there are too many courses for subjects that aren't real (e.g. Nutrition, what even is that?)
'Oriental Studies' was a euphemism for shagging used in Private Eye when it was good. Before your time Wats, and not very funny anyway.Both can be difficult degrees which lead to something if done at the right uni. SOAS in London is a pretty good uni which specialises in that (as the name suggests) but elsewhere it's about as soft a subject as you can get. At my uni we could do one module outside of our degree area. I mostly did business modules as they were easier than Economics and helped bump my marks up but people were doing all sorts of joke subjects.
First time posting on here, but I think I can provide some useful insight.
I got my A Level results last week, confirmed my place for Oxford Brookes uni and will be studying history there in September.
I personally don't agree with much of the sentiment towards my generation going to uni. Lots of the people from my (state) school have rightfully earned the opportunity to go to university and get a degree. There is a lot of pressure on students in sixth form nowadays to go to uni, in order to increase the school's reputation. I feel it's grossly unfair to judge my generation as we are being just because we strive to do something we actually want to do.
I will, however, accept that there are too many courses for subjects that aren't real (e.g. Nutrition, what even is that?)
First time posting on here, but I think I can provide some useful insight.
I got my A Level results last week, confirmed my place for Oxford Brookes uni and will be studying history there in September.
I personally don't agree with much of the sentiment towards my generation going to uni. Lots of the people from my (state) school have rightfully earned the opportunity to go to university and get a degree. There is a lot of pressure on students in sixth form nowadays to go to uni, in order to increase the school's reputation. I feel it's grossly unfair to judge my generation as we are being just because we strive to do something we actually want to do.
I will, however, accept that there are too many courses for subjects that aren't real (e.g. Nutrition, what even is that?)
No it doesn't. It did (in 2013/14) a module on the cultural phenomenon of Harry Potter, using bits of it to look at education, politics etc. Still bollocks of course, especially as she can't write for **** (I remember starting to read the first one to my son when he was small, got a couple of pages in saying 'sorry mate, this is unreadable, illiterate crap and there are hundreds of pages of it, I can't go on. But it will be in a film soon'). But it's undeniable that it is a cultural phenomenon and worthy of study (I'm all for study with no practical relevance). I take great pleasure in yelling 'It's a children's book FFS' at any adult professing to love Harry Potter.Durham does a degree on Harry Potter. I'm all for literature appraisal but this seems a bit limited - what do you do with the degree, apart from devoting your life to stalking J. K. Rowling?
Here's the module content. Undeniably poncey, and embarrassing for me, as I went to Durham, back when wooly mammoths still roamed the land.
Aims
Content
- to place the phenomenon that is Harry Potter™ in its social, cultural and educational context and understand some of the reasons for its popularity;
- to consider the relevance of Harry Potter to the education system in the twenty-first century;
- to understand twenty-first century education in the light that the Harry Potter series, and other educational fiction, casts on it;
- to make explicit connections between Harry Potter and citizenship education.
- The content will explore a number of key themes, including:
- Home and away: the shock of education
- Post-1945 as the Age of Illusion
- Harry Potter and the remaking of England
- Welcome to Hogwarts: the commodification of education. The sign replaces the thing - a reassuring world of uniforms, gowns and rituals
- Gryffindor and Slytherin: prejudice and intolerance in the classroom
- Anarchy and rebellion from Tom Brown to Harry Potter
- Myths and models: the power of educational examples
- Muggles and magic: the escape from the treadmill and the recovery of enchantment.
- Magic, reason and reality
- The peer group: bullying, friendship and solidarity
- Ideals of manhood: courage, ingenuity and integrity
- ‘My station and its duties’: Harry Potter and the good citizen
- The moral universe of the school. J.K. Rowling and the legacy of the school story from Rudyard Kipling to Grange Hill
First time posting on here, but I think I can provide some useful insight.
I got my A Level results last week, confirmed my place for Oxford Brookes uni and will be studying history there in September.
I personally don't agree with much of the sentiment towards my generation going to uni. Lots of the people from my (state) school have rightfully earned the opportunity to go to university and get a degree. There is a lot of pressure on students in sixth form nowadays to go to uni, in order to increase the school's reputation. I feel it's grossly unfair to judge my generation as we are being just because we strive to do something we actually want to do.
I will, however, accept that there are too many courses for subjects that aren't real (e.g. Nutrition, what even is that?)
Only 68,000 people graduated in 1980 (a couple of years before I did), in 2011 350,000 did so I'm guessing there must be 500k now. It's ridiculous, this sense of entitlement to something unearned.
Tip get a part time job in the catering trade, may be more useful later on
2:2 in African Studies
is that why it´s called a ´Desmond?´
aah I see, so if you get a 2:2 in Locomotive Engineering is it called a ´Hornby?´
aah I see, so if you get a 2:2 in Locomotive Engineering is it called a ´Hornby?´