How to choose a university

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2024
  • Some handy and "reasonably objective advice" about where to go to university from Professor Mike Merrifield, admissions tutor for physics at the University of Nottingham.
    Other videos in this "trilogy" at:
    • Students Beware - UCAS...
    • Secrets of Applying fo...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 155

  • @ZER0--
    @ZER0-- Před 10 lety +64

    He said companies will look at the university you went to, to see if that university turned out good students in the subject you chose !!! So it sounds like the companies know best and so if you know where you want to work ask the company which uni you should go to. Sorted !

  • @Yuskebub
    @Yuskebub Před 4 lety +4

    Another source you can always look at is a website called UniStats!
    They gather Surveys from graduates and ask about the quality of the course in many different aspects!
    It’s well worth a look at to help with the process! ^^

  • @SoAS26
    @SoAS26 Před 5 lety +19

    this guy is awesome. thank you for this video!.

  • @EmpireTVDragon
    @EmpireTVDragon Před 5 lety +6

    This video mainly addresses students in UK. Those things are harder to do as an international students. For example, I have to fly to the UK to attend to open day.

  • @Falcrist
    @Falcrist Před 11 lety +2

    I think I said this on one of the other videos of this type, but I'll say it again:
    This is an enormously helpful service you folks are doing for your viewers. It adds a LOT of value to this channel. Please keep this up.
    I'd like to note that this doesn't even help me in any way. I'm an Engineering student in the US. I wish I had this kind of advice about 13 years ago (when I was 17), and I'm VERY happy to see that it's available to students in the UK.

  • @shantelroesler4364
    @shantelroesler4364 Před 11 lety +6

    THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR MAKING THIS VIDEO!! I think all students can agree how much things like this really do help. I really wish there were more like it!

  • @daedra40
    @daedra40 Před 11 lety +2

    Thank you very much Brady, and Dr.Merrifield, for this lovely video with invaluable information and priceless insight.

  • @dadt8009
    @dadt8009 Před 5 lety +3

    In the UK, for degrees like physics and engineering, the top half or 1/3 of universities basically are teaching you very similar stuff with very similar qualities. The reason is that they have accreditation by professional bodies which set out the basic curriculum. Whether the universities get Gold or Silver or even Bronze in TEF doesn't tell you a lot because there are departments variations, and variations from lecturers to lecturers. I would say you just can just consider two factors, reputation and environment. You want peers who are hard working and enthusiastic, you want lecturers who are stimulating in teaching and active in research too, you worry about the quality of facilities, accommodation, the type of area the university is situated in, and the living costs. All of these are covered by reputation and environment. If you are aiming for universities ranking about 5 to 25 in your subject, they all are pretty similar in reputation too. Birmingham, Nottingham, Southampton, Leeds... very little to distinguish them in terms of reputation. So, in the end you can just look at the environment. Look at the campus and the city. This is just my suggestion.

  • @donnakam3176
    @donnakam3176 Před 8 lety +39

    I don't think I've got the information I wanted...

  • @gingerhid
    @gingerhid Před 11 lety

    These videos are really helpful, Brady. Keep them coming please!

  • @AstroMikeMerri
    @AstroMikeMerri Před 11 lety +2

    Definitely: one of the pieces of advice I often give is to take every opportunity to talk to current students in your subject on open days: not only do they actually know what it is like to be a student on the course, but they also do not have the agenda that any member of staff has, that their job depends on convincing you how good they are!

  • @nicemandan
    @nicemandan Před 11 lety +2

    One trick for average graders is to apply at a good uni for an HND. Enough people drop out of degree courses in the first few weeks you can transfer up to a degree. I did... at Nottingham, and got a 2:1.

  • @thedarkcreator252
    @thedarkcreator252 Před 11 lety

    just visited the university of Nottingham today, great uni, definitely will be applying and thanks for the advice!

  • @NZAnimeManga
    @NZAnimeManga Před 11 lety

    Thank you very much for this video, very helpful as someone aspiring for Physics at either Oxford, Imperial or Nottingham and as someone about to go into A2 levels.
    Thanks :)

  • @DracoMhuuh
    @DracoMhuuh Před 11 lety

    I absolutely agree, I am a physics student at Hasselt University (BE) and also a member of our council and I take every chance I have to come in contact with interested youngsters. I've been present on the open days, just because I believe I can give complementary info about the discipline. I hope to be able to complete the picture they have of our university by telling them how I experience things from the inside and to tell them that professors do care about their students.

  • @user-wh6su8md9i
    @user-wh6su8md9i Před 7 lety +6

    Gotta love the thumbnail. Nice pout PROF!

  • @grieske
    @grieske Před 11 lety

    Good for you (both)! Thank you for clarifying that I was generalizing. I was not clear about that.

  • @susanne1310
    @susanne1310 Před 11 lety

    Thank you! I've watched the video a couple of times now. I had to re-watch because my mind did explode a bit or at least melted a little. But that is really interesting and I'm happy I know this now! Thank you so much! :)

  • @rockforever96
    @rockforever96 Před 11 lety

    I've just finish my as level exams and I'm starting to think more about courses and universities I don't want to pinpoint exactly what I'd lime to do but I have a good idea and will probably be applying or at least starting a UCAS in 4 months time. I'm sure this video will Come in handy for me and many others so thank you for uploading this.

  • @Nocuras
    @Nocuras Před 10 lety

    If you have specific questions, every department usually also has students representing it (in german it's called "Fachschaft") who can give you very in depth answers to questions like how are theory and experiments weighted, how many math courses do undergraduates have to go to, are the professors strict or more lax...

  • @GregLoutsenko
    @GregLoutsenko Před 11 lety +1

    top 10 unis are about the same, they will all be good, you have to look at things like social life and resources like swimming pools, gyms, cafe and drinking policies!!! unis are not just about academic learning but about social maturity: girlfriends, foreign friends and all that

  • @cowalarmclock
    @cowalarmclock Před 11 lety +6

    I left university a few years ago. Good video but I wish it had been uploaded 9 years sooner... wait...

  • @r.b.4611
    @r.b.4611 Před 10 lety +1

    I like this advice to take a step towards maturation.

  • @a.i.l1074
    @a.i.l1074 Před 5 lety +1

    Would love a video for mature students, or people who aren't applying straight from school. That's been my position this year, and a lot of advice out there hasn't been relevant

  • @AlexandreAubrey
    @AlexandreAubrey Před 11 lety

    I don't know exactly how it works internationally, but i'm a grade 12 student from Canada, and application for universities were done a few months ago, and by now pretty much every course accepted it's students and most students already have registered to their classes and got next year's schedule all worked out. It's a great video but I wish it had been uploaded earlier. I was faced with the problem of choosing between two Universities (both in same town) which both said they were the best.

  • @louisburke8927
    @louisburke8927 Před 7 lety +3

    "The Atlas of Creation" book is interesting to see on his shelf.

  • @memyselfandme1433
    @memyselfandme1433 Před 11 lety

    The other thing to consider is whether there are similar courses which may be of more interest. Engineering vs physics? With a language? With a work placement?
    There's lots of variety available.

  • @hens0w
    @hens0w Před 11 lety

    yes. it generally recommended you find out what the academic tutors think of your qualifications and then you apply through UCAS.

  • @fatsaxcat
    @fatsaxcat Před 11 lety

    Dr. Merrifield,
    Think we could see some videos on different areas of research in physics (condensed matter, high energy, medical, nuclear, theoretical/experimental general relativity, etc.)? I try looking up information but most the time it's fluffed up, I would love to see more of the gritty day to day side of different research areas.
    Warm Regards.

  • @WhoIsAlan89
    @WhoIsAlan89 Před 11 lety +1

    Interesting to see how it works in a other country.
    In Switzerland you just go to your university of choice and register. All you need is a Highschool diploma (Matura).
    I guess I had it easy. Still no idea what i want as a job but I still have 2 more semester to go to my BA.

  • @davidc4408
    @davidc4408 Před 3 měsíci

    Great advice. This guy really cares

  • @sIightIybored
    @sIightIybored Před 11 lety

    I think I looked at the guardian league table top 20 for engineering and used that as a shortlist

  • @nottinghamscience
    @nottinghamscience  Před 11 lety +3

    no the other videos deal with different aspects of the process

  • @TMOMFXD
    @TMOMFXD Před 11 lety

    Looking forward to joining the university of nottingham this year (grades permitting)

  • @Noovil25
    @Noovil25 Před 11 lety

    Hi, I am not from the UK but I am giving a serious thought about studying in Nottingham, do you mind explaining what you mean by "HND" and "transfer up a degree" ? Thanks.

  • @Noovil25
    @Noovil25 Před 11 lety

    Hi, I am planning to take up physics too. I know physics is a vast subject, so I am quite clueless about which area of physics I might be interested in. Can you tell me a little about which part of physics interests you, and why? Thanks.

  • @joshhyyym
    @joshhyyym Před 11 lety

    Most universities will interview students for most subjects, if you can show that you have actually learned what you've said you have learnt then there is no reason that should count against you. The ucas website has a list of international qualifications along with their ucas points (points that used to compare qualifications in the UK) if the qualifications you have are comparable to Alevels you shouldn't have much trouble applying in the UK.

  • @sirelkir
    @sirelkir Před 11 lety

    For more questions should I write an e-mail to professor's address or should I send it to you and you'll eventually send it to professor? Or could you make a video with him or someone else about studying abroad or foreign students in UK?

  • @TheHenkan
    @TheHenkan Před 11 lety

    What's the best way to decide what university to go to if I want to study in the UK, but am currently living abroad?

  • @DracoMhuuh
    @DracoMhuuh Před 11 lety +1

    I'd argue that asking the students who study there is a very good way to get some info as well

  • @jasing8888
    @jasing8888 Před 11 lety +1

    Perfect time for me

  • @ImAzraa
    @ImAzraa Před 11 lety

    Wish i'd knew this when I applied. Even not being from the UK.
    Crap, i stumbled around like 5 years before going into IT.

  • @AstroMikeMerri
    @AstroMikeMerri Před 11 lety

    I can't speak for other institutions, some of whom definitely take such things into consideration, but our view is that applicants should be assessed on what they ultimately achieved, and not penalized for earlier attempts, so we only look at the final results, not whether they were retaken.

  • @callumtorrance9180
    @callumtorrance9180 Před 4 lety

    Have you taken the English Literature and film course, how has it turned out?

  • @SmallFryHero
    @SmallFryHero Před 11 lety

    I wish this video was posted last year when I was applying :P

  • @echoi2410
    @echoi2410 Před 11 lety

    Doing a degree in physics shows that you are numerate and can problem solve, those 2 skills make you a very good applicant to jobs in finance, engineering and software engineering/programming (Although there will be other field-specific skills needed obviously).

  • @panteraboosh
    @panteraboosh Před 11 lety

    If I get a AAA-AAB but did some AS levels again in my second year, would that affect my application much?

  • @jdgrahamo
    @jdgrahamo Před 11 lety

    It's better to do something you're interested in but not very good at than something you're good at but not interested in.
    What makes you think you won't be good enough anyway?

  • @kovar.youdisappointmedimit7548

    Very good video qlthough i think its a reupload?

  • @Shibbymatt
    @Shibbymatt Před 11 lety +1

    I'm 21 and about to start my 4th year studying for a masters of physics and I still don't know what I want to do career wise :P

  • @TheDoubleBee
    @TheDoubleBee Před 11 lety

    You could rephrase that "What's the second or third best place?" question to sound more flattering. Something like: "What other places would you recommend if I don't get the chance to study here?"

  • @guts120
    @guts120 Před 10 lety

    At university, you don't study one specific area over the course do you? I would assume you studied a broad range of topics.

  • @rosePetrichor
    @rosePetrichor Před 11 lety +1

    I'm sad to have had to reject my place for Physics at Nottingham, as meeting all of these people whom I've come to know and love through Brady's videos would have been extremely enjoyable.

  • @prezwhitehouse
    @prezwhitehouse Před 11 lety

    Is it possible to do a series of these for American audiences?

  • @thanawitsagulthang6471
    @thanawitsagulthang6471 Před 11 lety

    If I would like to be analytically chemist should I study at Nottingham university?

  • @Slithy
    @Slithy Před 11 lety

    Are citizens of other countries allowed to apply to university in UK?

  • @TheGreenOpossum
    @TheGreenOpossum Před 11 lety

    I`m 17 and don`t know yet what job I`ll have,but having the job of Mike Merrifield would certainly be great wouldn`t it?

  • @Pumpkinhead77
    @Pumpkinhead77 Před 10 lety +7

    I just chose the one that was nearest to me.

  • @DracoMhuuh
    @DracoMhuuh Před 11 lety

    There isn't really one subject I prefer over an other. But I do prefer theoretical physics over experimental.

  • @mitos95176
    @mitos95176 Před 11 lety

    What would it take you to at least apply at the University of Nottingham,if you are practically a foreigner?Does that possibility even exist?

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Před 11 lety

    If you're interested, it's much easier to develop the skill you want. Also, you may very well have set higher standards for yourself in physics because of this.

  • @mitos95176
    @mitos95176 Před 11 lety

    Very useful advice,but it's a pity there aren't many students out there that have such a broad range of possibilities to choose from.

  • @amoeba80
    @amoeba80 Před 11 lety

    well, i didn't have much problem during my time, because from where i am, there were only 2 universities to apply for.... :)

  • @OneCSeven
    @OneCSeven Před 11 lety

    Hey, Brady what about Grad Schools?

  • @colinbarushok
    @colinbarushok Před 11 lety

    This advice works here too

  • @nisbahmumtaz909
    @nisbahmumtaz909 Před 11 lety

    Depends on what degree it is.
    I doubt that the number of chemical engineering degree holders will increase anytime soon.

  • @mitos95176
    @mitos95176 Před 11 lety

    I'll do some further research,but thanks anyway. :)

  • @Ruakus
    @Ruakus Před 11 lety

    I'm interested in physics, but I'm afraid that if I finish the course, and I'm not good enough to be a physicist then my degree is useless. I don't see a lot of practical uses for physics. I don't want to just take another course after physics

  • @LoffysDomain
    @LoffysDomain Před 9 lety +4

    As someone from Sweden, I just: don't students just apply for all universities at one place (i.e. one application)?

    • @Arangggg
      @Arangggg Před 8 lety +1

      Loffy Yes through the UCAS system.

    • @Meetyouinhell1
      @Meetyouinhell1 Před 8 lety +3

      +Loffy you can only apply to 5 per year. (4 if applying for medicine)

  • @circusmonkey28
    @circusmonkey28 Před 5 lety

    How would you even word that question tho? What's stopping the staff from just talking about their own university?

  • @R3Cat
    @R3Cat Před 11 lety +1

    I'm 17 now, and how I wish I could make it into a university. :/

  • @Yukiyukiyukichi
    @Yukiyukiyukichi Před 11 lety

    how about asking university students?

  • @grieske
    @grieske Před 11 lety

    That depends. Being a professor is a 2-person job: you do the professor stuff, and your significant other runs the rest of your life. As for becoming a professor in physics, you need to do 3 postdocs (2-year jobs) on 3 different continents after your PhD. That means that any relationship you might have before you're 35 is going to last for 2 years max. That sucks. This does not even guarantee tenure.

  • @danamohanad8021
    @danamohanad8021 Před 8 lety +7

    im a pre-IGCSE international student. recently i found out that im interested in chemistry. i gave it a bit of thinking and decided on chemical engineering, if any of you guys are already studying it or finished, can you please tell me what subjects should i take besides chemistry of course. will i need physics? will i require alot of math knowledge?

    • @pennywood5653
      @pennywood5653 Před 8 lety

      +Dana Mohanad Maths and physics.

    • @The_Reductionist
      @The_Reductionist Před 8 lety +1

      +Dana Mohanad maybe a bit late, you cant do without maths-physics would help(preferred by Uni's) but would also give you very tough a levels/equivalent. do maths/chem/phy if you know you can work hard enough to do well in all 3.

    • @ibtisamal-jahsyi242
      @ibtisamal-jahsyi242 Před 7 lety

      omg yas I'm a pre igcsr student and love chemistry. How did u do? have you got any advice for me?

    • @beastkaybyt2865
      @beastkaybyt2865 Před 7 lety

      for a levels chemistry and maths you don't need physics

    • @orueom7720
      @orueom7720 Před 6 lety

      Dana Mohanad do maths chemistry and physics....the word engineering requires an in-depth knowledge of physics

  • @davidsweeney111
    @davidsweeney111 Před 11 lety

    Could you ask the lady that does the bumble bee research to talk about what degree she did please ?

  • @CaptainJS101
    @CaptainJS101 Před 8 lety +22

    I chose the wrong university.
    Am a university drop out.

    • @Kl2aTaiiz
      @Kl2aTaiiz Před 7 lety +1

      Why it was a wrong uni to you?

    • @CaptainJS101
      @CaptainJS101 Před 7 lety +4

      Really almost year since I posted the comment I now get a replie.
      I was not compatible with there style of teaching, I did not learn anything useful, I hated every day I was there, most of the in class helpers were not helpful but some were, I can go on. I have leaned more in the last 2 years of learning outside of education than the last 5 years of being in education.

    • @Kl2aTaiiz
      @Kl2aTaiiz Před 7 lety +1

      I am sorry for what had happened to you. What was their style of teaching like tho ? I have to submit my application next year and I am still have no ideas of where to apply.

    • @OMMCOMHD
      @OMMCOMHD Před 5 lety

      CaptainJS101 Aberdeen?

  • @masonlegere7774
    @masonlegere7774 Před 6 lety +1

    Too bad this video only has 62,00 views. More students should pay attention to things like this.

  • @MrGoDuck
    @MrGoDuck Před 11 lety

    12000Km for a university and I can't legally go back, I don't think "is it close to home?" Is such a big deal on the longer run. Just my opinion though. Great video btw.

  • @choukr0001
    @choukr0001 Před 11 lety +1

    University!!!!

  • @AstroMikeMerri
    @AstroMikeMerri Před 11 lety

    I wouldn't suggest trying to tell my wife that, as she has a serious career of her own! But the basic point is a sound one: following an academic career often (but not always) involves a number of moves, and presents the risk of reaching a dead end with no permanent position.

  • @nick_cooper
    @nick_cooper Před 11 lety

    My interview at a university was very misleading, which has lead to two very unhappy years. Don't just go to uni for the sake of it!

  • @jolt09l
    @jolt09l Před 5 lety +1

    this guy speaks so much truth they should of considered blurring his face
    You sir deserve some accolades

  • @ltericdavis2237
    @ltericdavis2237 Před 11 lety

    Well this would have been useful last year. But now I've applied and been accepted. Just have to wait for school to start up. But I've got Brady and other CZcamsrs to fill up my summer with SCIENCE!!

  • @thejapthejap
    @thejapthejap Před 11 lety

    As a 17 year old, thank you!

    • @user-ih3jl9um6e
      @user-ih3jl9um6e Před 2 lety

      @Tahir lol, I'm 17 now and your 19 and he is 26. I'm going through what u went through 2 years ago.

  • @Enke796
    @Enke796 Před 11 lety

    3:55 Oh, UK, you are funny. I bet british also enjoying queues.

  • @TheDuckofDoom.
    @TheDuckofDoom. Před 8 lety +3

    What is a league table? We don't have this term on the west coast of North America.

    • @TheInfiniteFish
      @TheInfiniteFish Před 8 lety +7

      Basically a list of the universities, ranked by one or more criteria. So here, you tend to get places like Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial College consistently at or near the top since they are, supposedly, the 'best' (whatever that actually mean)

    • @shmink2
      @shmink2 Před 8 lety

      It also varies per course. I do computer science at one of the 'top 5' unis but its overall ranking is pretty low.

    • @meepk633
      @meepk633 Před 6 lety +2

      We have university/college rankings. There's a ton of services/newspapers that make them in the US and Canada. If that's where you are.

  • @Slithy
    @Slithy Před 11 lety

    That sounds really nice and fair.
    In my country only your papers count, no additional interviews. And educational system is so bad that you basically need to pay for your session exams, you don't even need to study anything. You are basically buying a degree and wasting 5 years of your life. That's why i didn't go to the university after school. I'm not OK with that type of stuff, even if that means i won't get a decent job.

  • @Slithy
    @Slithy Před 11 lety

    I'm 21 and i have an equivalent of a highschool diploma. I'm from an ex-USSR country, so things are a bit different over here.
    Self-education doesn't count, i guess.
    Now i need to google up some info and start to save money for the next year :)

  • @mrnosy1
    @mrnosy1 Před 11 lety

    its ok jamil

  • @susanne1310
    @susanne1310 Před 11 lety +1

    What's the multiverse?

  • @Noovil25
    @Noovil25 Před 11 lety

    It doesn't, but you have to remember this is reality.

  • @GyanPratapSingh
    @GyanPratapSingh Před 11 lety

    SAME

  • @late_arvie
    @late_arvie Před 11 lety +5

    If you are reading this - you should study physics! Yes. That's right. Physics.

  • @youtubeadventurer1881
    @youtubeadventurer1881 Před 4 lety +2

    The UK university rankings like the Guardian ranking etc might as well have been drawn out of a hat. The international rankings however, such as the QS world rankings are pretty much on point.

    • @Sandra2445x
      @Sandra2445x Před 3 lety +1

      i agree although thecompleteuniversityguide is a much better table than the guardian, plus QS places a lot of emphasis on research which a lot of students i know aren’t that bothered about.

  • @billysmith9289
    @billysmith9289 Před 10 lety

    ***** Is there a specific reason you don't want to be in software development?

    • @tommylight1312
      @tommylight1312 Před 10 lety

      *****
      I'm only 18, but my advice to you would be what my band director gave to me. "Find something that you love, something you've loved to do or would love to do, and pursue it." Especially considering you"re 35, you really don't have anything to lose. If you hate Software Development, find something you love to do. When you're 60 you don't want to have any regrets do you?

  • @jmpt19
    @jmpt19 Před 11 lety +3

    Notting Ham universirty, here i come

  • @susanne1310
    @susanne1310 Před 11 lety

    No, I'm sorry, I've never heard the word "multiverse" before. Please keep in mind I'm 14 and not from an English speaking country. I tried to google it but it came back with only comic book related results so I thought I'd ask. I know I'm stupid. Please forget I aksed, I'm sorry.

  • @JanCajthaml
    @JanCajthaml Před 11 lety

    Sorry for my grammar its 3 o' clock at morning and I am relaxing from my 2 months preparation for master finals. (Yup we have not only the defense of thesis, we have the state final exams from everything in every detail what we learned or talked about in master degree)

  • @TissueCat
    @TissueCat Před 11 lety

    Of course most 17 year olds don't know what they want to do with their lives. Most 30 year olds don't know what they want to do with their lives.

  • @rafeverao4105
    @rafeverao4105 Před 8 lety +14

    I'm actually feeling a lot braver now; "most 17 year-olds don't know what job they want".
    14 yrs, and I have the selection of Biochemist or Barrister :D Thank you professor for the advice, we all appreciate it.

    • @supbscripter4079
      @supbscripter4079 Před 8 lety

      +Jack Taylor Lol imn 12 and I know what I want to do im thinking of doing theoretical physics or something else lol :P
      I cant do something which :
      . Involves lots of traveling
      . Involves lots of people skills
      . Dosent involve super white boards!

    • @rafeverao4105
      @rafeverao4105 Před 8 lety

      DrCub! Why no whiteboards? Besides, theory will probably require those too.

    • @supbscripter4079
      @supbscripter4079 Před 8 lety

      Whiteboards make me cringe lol.

    • @thesentientneuron6550
      @thesentientneuron6550 Před 5 lety

      I wanted to do astronomy and theoretical physics at about 10

    • @user-kl1on3nw7y
      @user-kl1on3nw7y Před 5 lety +1

      Jack Taylor lol Ur 17 now do u know what u wanna do