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SUPPORTING APPLICATIONS TO CAMBRIDGE Some specific issues

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Title: SUPPORTING APPLICATIONS TO CAMBRIDGE Some specific issues


1
SUPPORTING APPLICATIONSTO CAMBRIDGESome
specific issues
  • Richard Partington
  • Senior Tutor, Churchill College

2
A LEVEL COMBINATIONS
  • Research conducted for us by Cambridge Assessment
    indicates that this is rather less of an issue
    than some recent media comment has suggested
  • Consult our published advice re
  • Keystone subjects
  • Useful subjects
  • So-called soft subjects

3
HOW DO YOUR STUDENTS MEASURE UP?
  • Profile of a statistically middling Cambridge
    applicant
  • GCSE 4-8 As
  • AS 87-93 across three most relevant, or best,
    subjects
  • Profile of a typical successful applicant, whose
    education has not been significantly
    disadvantaged or disrupted
  • GCSE A in most subjects
  • AS 92-97, including one or two rather lower
    scores, and perhaps a lower overall grade in a
    non-relevant fourth or fifth subject
  • These are not minimal requirements!

4
UCAS REFERENCE
  • Most references describe excellent students but
    few describe exceptional ones
  • The most helpful references
  • Are consistent and specific, indicating where an
    applicant lies in relation to his/her peers
  • Emphasise the academic and the subject-related
  • Tell us about organisation and focus
  • Back the genuinely exceptional to the hilt but be
    realistic
  • Trust us to read between the lines
  • Extra letters

5
SAMPLE REFERERENCE 1
  • She is extremely well motivated and
    conscientious, with outstanding intellectual
    ability and great personal charm. An
    exceptionally well rounded student, she has
    contributed so much to the life of the school.
    She is an outstanding geographer with the
    potential to succeed at university. She has
    developed excellent cartographic, graphical and
    statistical skills. She contributes well to
    discussion and has made good presentations to the
    group. She is highly organised and expresses
    herself well in both oral and written and English
    She is an exemplary student with an excellent
    academic record and impressive commitment to the
    school, as Deputy Head Girl, as well as to the
    wider community.
  • GCSE 10A
  • AS 92

6
SAMPLE REFERENCE 2
  • She is an exceptionally gifted student one of
    the most erudite and cerebral to have passed
    through this school. Her decision to study
    History at university is eminently appropriate
    given her long-held fascination with, and
    insatiable appetite for, the subject. She is a
    scholarly and forensic historian who responds to
    primary and secondary sources alike with
    incredible enthusiasm and commitment. Her
    analytical and evaluative skills are acute and
    her knowledge built through reading
    extensive. She has in abundance the clarity of
    thought and meticulousness that are needed for
    her intended degree She also has a laconic
    sense of humour, a product of her intellectualism
    no doubt, and esoteric, discriminatory musical
    taste It is easy to trot out platitudes in a
    UCAS reference but she is a superb student of
    immense potential, easily capable of obtaining a
    First at university.
  • GCSE 10 A
  • AS 94

7
UCAS PERSONAL STATEMENT
  • How do we use personal statements?
  • To confirm appropriateness of chosen subject and
    course
  • As an embarkation-point for discussion at
    interview
  • Subject focus
  • Reading and other wider exploration
  • Work experience, in vocational subjects
  • Personal statements must be both honest and
    personal
  • Extra-curricular activities/positions of
    responsibility these are of only very marginal
    importance to us but some universities do look at
    them

8
CRITICAL READING
  • Gender relations in the eighteenth century
    contemporary comment
  • Enduring love in marriage depends upon earnest
    endeavour to please on both sides. If the love of
    a wife is tempered with good sense, she will be
    sure never to have any private views of her own,
    nor to do anything of consequence, that her
    husband might possibly dislike without first
    consulting him. To behave with an obliging air of
    friendship and courtesy towards his relations and
    friends engages the affection of a husband
    greatly. The duties of a wife to her husband are
    no less than love, fidelity and obedience to all
    his lawful desires and prudent counsels.
  • My dear mother lived with my brother, Josiah, as
    his housekeeper. She had become infirm and unable
    to keep the house, and wished him to marry,
    because he was not willing to take on a servant
    as housekeeper. So, with his mothers consent and
    approval, Josiah married Sybil Green. My mother
    seemed well satisfied with the marriage, but when
    the young wife came to housekeeping, my mother
    wanted to play a greater role in directing this
    than Sybil would allow, and this made my mother
    uneasy. Therefore, a year later, my brother asked
    me to have mother live with me, which I freely
    consented to. So, she came to me and my sister,
    and dwelt with us in much content and unity.
    Josiahs wife was of a resolute disposition, and,
    as he was a quiet and easy man, he had readily
    agreed the matter for the sake of peace.

9
TYPICAL PITFALLS AT INTERVIEW
  • Candidates have done insufficient
    revision/homework on
  • The Cambridge course
  • Recent school/college work
  • Submitted essays (where applicable)
  • They cannot back up what they wrote in their UCAS
    personal statement
  • They have not read anything, or they havent read
    it analytically or critically
  • They try to perform or second-guess what is
    going on

10
SUPPORTING THE DISAPPOINTED
  • Last year 5400 unsuccessful Cambridge
    applicants went on to achieve three or more A
    grades at A level
  • We could happily take many more of our applicants
    were places available
  • Competition is very tough and our decisions are
    enormously difficult
  • The Pool
  • Feedback
  • Re-application

11
MORE INFORMATION
  • Useful additional information is available in our
  • prospectus and on our website at
  • www.cam.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/interviews
  • www.cam.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/requirement
    s
  • www.cam.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/responses
  • www.cam.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/statistics
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