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We is all fick
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“The period of the disintegration of the European Union has begun. And the first vessel to have departed is Britain” -
Best avoiding the General forum then.Originally posted by Fronttoback View PostI'm not really into passive aggressive bullying thanks.
But thanks for the tip!
The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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I did Maths A-Level back in 92. We were told back then that the work involved to get three good A-Level results (BBB or better) would be the same amount of work that we'd do across three years to get a degree. Looking back, they were right. That said, I went to a grammar school's sixth form unit rather than a sixth form college so we may have been pushed harder.Originally posted by VectraMan View PostI was in the last year to do O-level, and I remember in year 2 of A-level my maths teacher complaining about the new influx of GCSE maths students starting A-level but being a long way behind we'd been after O-level.
But then I went to University (computing/electronics) and it seemed everything in the first year was rehasing stuff I already knew from A-level Maths or Physics.
Internationally we were probably all fick in 1989 too.The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't existComment
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Originally posted by LondonManc View PostI did Maths A-Level back in 92. We were told back then that the work involved to get three good A-Level results (BBB or better) would be the same amount of work that we'd do across three years to get a degree. Looking back, they were right. That said, I went to a grammar school's sixth form unit rather than a sixth form college so we may have been pushed harder.I did maths and further maths at a-level and got a grade A in one, so I was fairly handy with an abacus. I then went on to study maths as a joint honours subject at a top tier red brick uni in the early 90s.. and I really struggled with the maths. I found it a huge jump from a-level. I scraped through the maths but the top end kids waltzed through without trying. At that level in the top unis, success at maths is mostly aptitude not grind. The grinders don't get 1st class honours in maths (I exclude stats from this generalisation - since stats is fairly concrete, easy to grasp maths).Originally posted by VectraMan View PostI was in the last year to do O-level, and I remember in year 2 of A-level my maths teacher complaining about the new influx of GCSE maths students starting A-level but being a long way behind we'd been after O-level.
But then I went to University (computing/electronics) and it seemed everything in the first year was rehasing stuff I already knew from A-level Maths or Physics.
Internationally we were probably all fick in 1989 too.Comment
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You need A* A* A (A*s in maths/fmaths) to get into a top tier red brick for maths these days, so while the exams are no doubt easier you do have to absolutely nail them to get the results you need (90%+)Originally posted by Fronttoback View PostI did maths and further maths at a-level and got a grade A in one, so I was fairly handy with an abacus. I then went on to study maths as a joint honours subject at a top tier red brick uni in the early 90s.. and I really struggled with the maths. I found it a huge jump from a-level. I scraped through the maths but the top end kids waltzed through without trying. At that level in the top unis, success at maths is mostly aptitude not grind. The grinders don't get 1st class honours in maths (I exclude stats from this generalisation - since stats is fairly concrete, easy to grasp maths).Comment
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If you happened to look at A level Maths books over the last 40 years you will see that some of the stuff has gone missing...Originally posted by pr1 View PostYou need A* A* A (A*s in maths/fmaths) to get into a top tier red brick for maths these days, so while the exams are no doubt easier you do have to absolutely nail them to get the results you need (90%+)"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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I dont make it a pastime but yes, while I was doing my easy peasy counting-to-ten maths A level we did look at past exam papers from the 1970s and 1980s and yes, they were very difficult. But in those days you only needed to get a B to get into a top university whereas now you need near perfect scores, if you get stumped on one question you're screwedOriginally posted by SueEllen View PostIf you happened to look at A level Maths books over the last 40 years you will see that some of the stuff has gone missing...Comment
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