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Requirements For Studies In Uk

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BlazeV | 17:44 Sun 13th Jan 2019 | Jobs & Education
11 Answers
Hi, I would like to know what chances do I have for studying in IT branch in UK and getting scholarship if I have G.E.D. from United States and I'm a EU citizen

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British universities normally require UK students to have a minimum of 5 'high level' GCSE passes and at least three A-level passes. (There's actually a points system but it's probably not relevant here). GCSE examinations are taken at age 16 (after studying typically 9 or 10 subjects to that level) and A-level examinations are taken at age 18 (after...
18:22 Sun 13th Jan 2019
i think your best option would be to seek sponsorship from a company
Question Author
I understand but what are my chances?
If you simply want to study IT at university I think the universities are happy to find places for most students who can bring the fees in
Question Author
Thanks but do I have big or small chance# with my current G.E.D?
I think scholarships are hard to come by if you want to be paid for studying, but you need to approach some employers
Enquire at a university. The AnswerBank is not a university site.
British universities normally require UK students to have a minimum of 5 'high level' GCSE passes and at least three A-level passes. (There's actually a points system but it's probably not relevant here). GCSE examinations are taken at age 16 (after studying typically 9 or 10 subjects to that level) and A-level examinations are taken at age 18 (after studying just three, or possibly four, subjects).

A GED is equivalent to a US High School Graduation Diploma but (presumably due to the very general nature of the education involved) the body administering the university application process here (UCAS) regards that as only around our GCSE level. (See here: https://www.ucas.com/sites/default/files/2015-international-qualifications.pdf ).

A university looking for students for its IT courses will almost certainly require, among other things, a reasonably good grade in A-level mathematics (or, of course, its international equivalent). That assumes (as far as our own education system is concerned) that candidates will have spent two years of post-16 study concentrating on mathematics as just one of three or four subjects which make up a full-time curriculum. See pages 11 to 27 here to see the typical course content for A-level mathematics: https://www.cambridgeinternational.org/Images/203041-2017-2018-syllabus.pdf . If you've not got a qualification which proves you've got the mathematical confidences demanded by that syllabus it's unlikely that you'd be accepted for an IT course by a British university. (I used to teach A-level mathematics and it was generally only the very best students at that level who could gain a university place to study in the field of IT).

If you're still determined to try though, this might be of some help to you:
https://www.ucas.com/undergraduate/applying-university/international-and-eu-students/tips-international-applications
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