Oxford English Mock Interview

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • Use timestamp links below:
    0:00 - Intro
    03:03 - Interview
    30:30 - Interview Review
    38:41 - Q&A
    Ever wanted to see an Oxford Interview live in action? Check out this demonstration in English, run by Professor Helen Barr, and featuring 3rd Year Chloe Taylor.
    Please note, interviews will be held remotely for 2020, and the College you have applied to will send you specific instructions if you receive one. For more information, refer to this link: www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/under...
    The advice on content in these videos is still relevant and valuable in the meantime.

Komentáře • 49

  • @maxomatosis_
    @maxomatosis_ Před 4 lety +47

    wait, so whose perv is it?

  • @VtRD
    @VtRD Před 4 lety +83

    Love this--Oxford really takes learning to another level, versus pretty much every US college I know of. This is a wonderful resource.

    • @James-gk8ip
      @James-gk8ip Před 3 lety +2

      US colleges, at their best, are similarly rigorous and personal.

    • @bubbacalling
      @bubbacalling Před 3 lety +7

      most US colleges are garbage money making machines, bit like Australia

    • @orugasaki
      @orugasaki Před 2 lety +3

      Nah Caltech and MIT are better

    • @xowenz9738
      @xowenz9738 Před 2 lety +7

      @@orugasaki Oxford is more prestigious.

  • @Rizwan_Mir
    @Rizwan_Mir Před 2 lety +3

    I really enjoyed it ❤
    Thanks

  • @elsaritchie7949
    @elsaritchie7949 Před 4 lety +48

    This is an incredible resource. Thank you so much! I am hoping to apply for History of Art next year but this has been very useful!!

    • @fjmh3933
      @fjmh3933 Před 2 lety +2

      Good luck with your application Elsa!!

  • @wonderwoman5528
    @wonderwoman5528 Před rokem +4

    Was reading the poem and pausing the video so I could think of the answer. It is a lot harder than it looks! :)

  • @ambertasniem7245
    @ambertasniem7245 Před 4 lety +4

    Thank you!

  • @Stand_Up_Guys
    @Stand_Up_Guys Před 4 lety +12

    Please please please do one for chemistry

  • @hayleygriffiths9868
    @hayleygriffiths9868 Před 2 lety +24

    I'm hoping to apply to Oxford University next year- this mock interview has really helped me prepare and really see what to realistically expect :)

  • @zakariazaki7513
    @zakariazaki7513 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for video keep going 🤠 greeting from Morocco

  • @senankhawaja4789
    @senankhawaja4789 Před 4 lety +13

    Very helpful! I am interviewing next week at LMH for history and politics.

    • @crustyoldfart
      @crustyoldfart Před 2 lety

      I take it that LMH means Lady Margaret Hall - originally the posh one of two women's colleges the other being Somerville with a better reputation for academic achievement.

  • @emreucer1284
    @emreucer1284 Před 4 lety +9

    Could you please do one for economics or management? Thank you.

  • @oldsachem
    @oldsachem Před rokem +2

    Interesting that the poem speaks of the calculus of a perfect curve and the proctor is a crippled crutch, The twelve-pane window suggests the measured pain of the old madge. The window suggests the demarcation between the Age of Superstition and the Age of Quantum Rationalism posted by the genius of Newton, Leibniz, Einstein, et al. Office suggests the infinitessimal of the individual in the Postmodern. Pheasant rhymes with peasant. Calculus was invented in 17th century to measure the flight of divine objects in the heavens.

  • @sunriatigracefebriasihsili7848

    Grace les bahasa inggris atau bahasa yang "diakui secara Internasional" maka saya Grace kuliah di Universitas Cambridge Inggris dan Universitas Oxford Inggris."

  • @user-jv7ig6ie5b
    @user-jv7ig6ie5b Před 4 lety +30

    I don't understand how she read out loud and analysed the title 'The Pheasant and the Astronomers' and then proceeded to completely miss the fact that the people in the office are astronomers, instead talking about financial projections, etc.

    • @James-gk8ip
      @James-gk8ip Před 3 lety +2

      Yes and the examiner seemed to go along with it.

    • @Nikelaos_Khristianos
      @Nikelaos_Khristianos Před 3 lety +92

      Because the examiner said beforehand: "There are no right answers." She was more interested in the way the applicant thought and explained herself rather than what she was actually saying.

    • @timmycorbitt5870
      @timmycorbitt5870 Před 2 lety +4

      They are office workers who become astronomers only by virtue of observation the heavenly apparition of the day-star. Astronomers don't work in offices, my friend. The poem is very very poor.

    • @tealwashablemarker8886
      @tealwashablemarker8886 Před 2 lety +9

      @@timmycorbitt5870 the fact that they “become astronomers only by virtue of observation of the heavenly apparition of the day-star” is an effective use of metaphor, comparing the office workers to astronomers to represent this observation (and in a very strong manner). things not being straightforwardly represented in poetry doesn’t make it a poorly written poem - it’s an integral part of how poems present ideas, using methods like metaphor, and in poetry’s beauty.

    • @animalthinker5473
      @animalthinker5473 Před 2 lety +3

      @@James-gk8ip the interviewer says in the review that they tried guiding the interviewee towards talking about 'science' and 'labs', but the interviewee didn't quite pick up on it. The interviewer doesn't have to dictate the direction of the discussion. In this case, they just wanted to engage with what the interviewee thought, which unfortunately didn't go towards that point.

  • @mariacarolinadasilva384
    @mariacarolinadasilva384 Před 4 lety +1

    Really good

  • @cinaside6896
    @cinaside6896 Před 3 lety +5

    Please do one for maths

    • @caelanpereira5458
      @caelanpereira5458 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes! Was funny witching this being a maths student myself but still interesting

  • @fallacyfallout6985
    @fallacyfallout6985 Před 3 lety +9

    This may not be the right place to ask this question but could our finest calculas be comparable to the coarsest curve, assuming, of course, that not all of nature's curves are perfect? I guess we don't really know...

    • @tealwashablemarker8886
      @tealwashablemarker8886 Před 2 lety +1

      shit thats a good idea

    • @krishnagopalsrivastava2084
      @krishnagopalsrivastava2084 Před rokem +4

      A challenging question really. I like to think that the main appeal of nature is not so much in its symmetrical or geometrically 'perfect' beauty but its unrestricted authenticity . Our calculas and other inventions may at times be more perfect than the uneven curves of jaggy mountains or unequal number of petals in a flower but nature will always be more pleasurable and delightful than constructed and mechanical ways our life because nature is not imposed. We are at times repelled by even our own most perfect specimens of architecture or invention because it compels us to accept its monotony whereas nature (not only in the biological sense but our own pschycology. I like to think everything that is not constructed but comes from within us is nature . Be it tangible trees or untangible emotions ) sets us free. The beauty of nature is that it's liberating.

  • @sunriatigracefebriasihsili7848

    Presiden Inggris ada 2 yaitu Grace (GW) DAN JOANNE KATHLEEN (J.K.=Jusuf Kalla juga wakil presiden indonesia) Rowling (Rolling=Diputar) FOREVER.

  • @LindaAndrews-ly1qf
    @LindaAndrews-ly1qf Před 7 měsíci

    3:04 30:20

  • @Olivia-et8ju
    @Olivia-et8ju Před 4 měsíci

    15:32

  • @JoePortly
    @JoePortly Před 3 lety

    Another exercise in arm-waving - as though for a degree in market-trading
    And how the interviewee wields her writing instrument - as though for a career in BBC-newsreading

  • @crustyoldfart
    @crustyoldfart Před 2 lety +5

    At 18:25 - " Let's just focus on the last 6 lines because I think we're running out of time " - and. the interview goes on for more than another 20 minutes.
    There was all this talk about the ' poem ' - largely unintelligible talk - and above the heads of most of us, which since we were not treated to an initial reading of the poem made us feel doubly inadequate.
    One wonders what the producers of this piece were hoping to achieve ; it seemed so unfocused and amateurish - the word " rambling " comes to mind.
    I was baffled by the unconnected use of the word ' calculus ' - not a word one expects to find in a poem - and ' a perfect curve ' - perhaps a little closer to what we might consider a subject of poetry - but in this case being linked to ' calculus ' introduces a seemingly antithetical flavour to what most of us associate with poetry.
    Reference was made to discussing poetry which was not well know and also ' modern ' which is a loose term meaning one presumes either it is written in the modern style [ without rhyme of meter ], or maybe just written an hour ago.

    • @JamesBur
      @JamesBur Před 2 lety +16

      I'm pretty sure Oxford University know what they're doing mate

    • @crustyoldfart
      @crustyoldfart Před 2 lety

      @@JamesBur Let's hope that such surety gives you comfort then - mate. A question that should be of concern to potential students, and those paying their way, is - do the latter know what Oxford University is doing ? A pure example of caveat emptor.

    • @animalthinker5473
      @animalthinker5473 Před 2 lety +11

      Your first point reflects how inaccurate you are, as if you're more interested in slander than actual analysis. The interview does not last for 20minutes after that point, it moves into the review phase pretty soon afterwards. Perfectly reasonable to tighten the focus on a specific part anyways. Also, you can easily Google the poem yourself and read along if you actually were interested in understanding their discussion. Not to mention your penultimate point again is pretty inaccurate. Of course they're going to choose a lesser known poem, so that the interviewee is likely exposed to an unseen text that they can provide spontaneous and original analysis on. Also, your final point is weird. It is not 'modern style' to write without rhyme or meter. So many older poems have been written without these features. And what is a more classic subject for poetry? It changes entirely depending on the time period / geography. So it seems like an odd point to make.

    • @catherinehoy5548
      @catherinehoy5548 Před rokem

      I googled the poem, it's a beauty.

    • @david-th225
      @david-th225 Před rokem

      @Harold - At @4:50 the title of the poem is clearly stated , and a subsequent ( literal ) 20 second google search would give you the poem; which would then leave much of your childish, pedantic rant unnecessary. All that time you spent typing your idiotically peevish comment could have been spent on a similar time-length devoted to simply reading the poem yourself from the aforementioned Internet search.

  • @BoilsonA
    @BoilsonA Před 10 měsíci +1

    Studying 📖 English 😂😂😂😂😂 !!! In this competitive world 🌎 requiring top end skills, innovation, engineering, mathematics, computing, logistics.... 👌 👏

    • @ish4638
      @ish4638 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Some people still appreciate art, Andrew.

  • @bubbacalling
    @bubbacalling Před 6 měsíci

    Will she be wearing crocs at the interview? I don't like smelly feet.