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It's a lot more work and you have to organise much more of it yourself so you need to be motivated. You might have only seven or eight hours a week contact time (lectures and seminars) but you will need to do a lot of work on your own and there won't be a teacher constantly telling you what to do so you need to motivate yourself and manage your time well.
Yes
Everything is more work than school. And, guess what, when you leave university, life is harder and more work.
Good luck!
You need to do a lot of work outside lectures and tutorials to get a good grade - but it's no harder than A'levels. I've seen loads of people who've failed A'levels. Not sure I've ever met anyone who got to the end of a degree and failed it!
Much harder .. imagine school work times it by fifty and then you are close
Yes, it is. Thankfully I was blessed with an abnormally large... no, no, well, I have a large 'that' as well, but I was talking about my brain here.
Still, it would have been much easier to have been born a dog. That's the life; just lying around all day, scratching myself and drinking out of the toilet. Aaaahh, we can but dream.
Yr 1, abit harder than A-levels.
Yr 2, much harder than the first year.
Yr 3, incredibly hard.
It depends on what course you did though. I did biochemistry. Some of the arty people I knew hardly went into uni ... wasn't sure if they were still students.
Its more work, but the actual content of the course is easier then your A-Levels.
The difference is staff at school are being paid to push the
ignorant up through the system and university staff make their
money keeping the ignorant from system graduation. Feel free to pay university enrollment to prove you're an imbecile.
Whilst it involves a LOT of hard work, reading and self-directed study, it depends on your subject and the way you worked before. I did v well at school but find uni study totally different so am struggling, whereas my boyfriend did badly at school but got into uni and came out with a first. Some degrees are all coursework and some, like mine are a mixture of coursework and exam. It also depends if you get "distracted" by uni life and put the social side of uni before work. Still, it's a great place to be! All the best to you.
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