Monday, December 10, 2012

An offer?

It’s been a while since I last posted and since then, many things have happened. From a university interview to my AS examinations, and up to my first offer, things have been such a whirlwind.

While my friends received offers left, right, and centre, I honestly wasn’t expecting much. I have yet to take my LNAT, and without it, 2 of my chosen universities would consider my application incomplete, whilst another university is notorious amongst students for giving out offers much later than the rest.

And so, when I received an email by UCAS, I was not only shocked – I was worried.

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There is no possible way to make the Application Status Notification any more ambiguous and nerve-wrecking than how it already is.

I clicked from link to link to link.. and after much brain busting to remember my UCAS ID and password, I found out that I was made a conditional offer to one of the top universities for Law in London! Open-mouthed smile 

The relief I felt with that one email was incredible. All that resonated in my head was the plain fact that despite it all, as long as I achieve my conditional offer grades of A*AA, I would be able to go to UK. I wasn’t offerless and I wasn’t doomed. There was hope and it was an amazing feeling.

At the moment, this is the only offer I’ve received so far, and until I sit for my LNAT next week, I doubt there’ll be any more to come in the near future.

It was a quick update but I’ll be back with more on my interview for Cambridge and if all goes well, tips for the LNAT.

To the rest who are still waiting for your offers, it would do no good to advise you not to worry, for I was worried myself. But what I can say is that don’t be too quick to have a ‘fixed’ university in mind. UCAS has allowed you to apply for 5, and these five should be your top five choices. With that, keep your eyes on all five and when even one falls into your lap, feel the elation I felt and be prepared to meet the requirements!

Till then! Smile

Monday, October 15, 2012

Tips for your application!

Hello there, new blog!

As customary when making new friends, one must introduce oneself thoroughly. If not already obvious, my name is Tiffany and I'm an 18 year old Malaysian student studying in a local private college, hoping to ultimately further my education in UK to read Law. I'm currently in the midst of my AS examinations and have my fingers, toes, and shoelaces crossed for the best. Rather than rush my application, I decided to apply early in September and all there's left to do is sit for my LNAT and wait patiently (or as patiently as I can) for the results.

To some, UCAS applications are a breeze. They go by each virtual page as quickly as one would take to flip through a book, knowing exactly what they need to fill and where they need to fill it. Others, find themselves a little more frazzled, saving rather than marking every section as complete, and having questions to ask for every section. While applying through UCAS, I found myself as lost as I was certain, filling in certain sections without a hitch, while frantically scouring the Internet or paying multiple visits to the nice woman at my college's Placement Centre for other parts. Eventually, I completed my form, made the necessary payments, and finally sent it in! To those who find themselves in the latter category I mentioned, UCAS is a lot more straightforward than it seems but here are a few useful tips to completing your applications.

1. Research and decide.

Some take very long to fill up their UCAS form for the sole reason that they keep changing their mind. Once I decided my course, I found it useful to list out prospective universities beforehand and do a through search on each one. The Internet is chock-filled with helpful student review sites which will ease your decision-making process. As an international student applying to read Law, for me, it was important to know which universities required the LNAT as well as the minimum IELTS score I was required to have. This research should ideally be done early so once you come around to filling in your choices, you won't feel so uncertain and completing the form will be quicker.

2. Check with the website!

Although many of us (myself included) find it much easier to write our personal statements on word programmes such as Microsoft Word, the UCAS website submits our personal statements with different alignments. In a nutshell, what may be 47 lines in Microsoft Word could be 54 lines on UCAS. Rather than panic (much like how I did) when you realize your 4000 characters personal statement is 5 lines over the limit, constantly keep pasting your statement on the website to keep the line count in check.

3. Check, check, check!

Once you're done filling in everything, get them all checked! Ask your parents or even peers to cross check your form to ensure that you haven't left anything out. You could even meet up in groups to help each other out! - At the end of the day, with the plethora of helpful UCAS guides online, support from teachers and friends, as well as your own determination, filling up a UCAS form isn't as daunting as it seems at the beginning. At least, that's how I felt.

I'll be back once my AS examinations are over, but till then, feel free to snoop around my personal website to get to know me better! Throughout the year, I'll be detailing my struggles and triumphs regarding my university placements so undoubtedly, we'd get better acquainted that way as well!

So hey, leave a comment, follow, and here's to the start of a beautiful new friendship!