Transposition made easy video 3 - Electrical Science and principles 1st year exam

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  • čas přidán 26. 03. 2022
  • Welcome to the 3rd video in my transposition series. In this video, I briefly go through the resistivity formula to warm you up, before we address the Pythagoras formula.
    Make sure you add both these formula to your exam formula revision sheet, and practice writing it out over and over again. Until you can do it with your eyes closed.
    When you get into your 2st year science exam, I want you to ask for a piece of paper before you even log into the computer. Then I want you to write out your formula sheet from memory and free your mind, so that you can focus on the exam questions themselves, without trying to hold the formula in your head at the same time.
    As with anything, you only get out, what you put in. Fail to plan and plan to fail.
    Good luck!
    As always, please like, share, and subscribe to get these important messages out there.
    Take care
    Adrian

Komentáře • 3

  • @teyronjayneevans3278
    @teyronjayneevans3278 Před 2 lety +1

    I have City & Guilds L3 soon . Am sure there will be alot of transposing

  • @MrSeananners12345
    @MrSeananners12345 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Adrian this completely off topic to this video but i have just watched your video on am i qualified? you released around a year ago now. I'm 21 years years old and soon to have completed my level 2 going on to level 3 at college. I haven't looked for an apprenticeship because i wish to qualify as quickly as i can. I'm pretty sure the problems you spoke about are still happening to this day and the route i'm heading down is going to lead me into these problems. Do you have any advice for me as i'm quite worried about how this will play out for financially. I have got onto the government scheme for level 2 and 3 so i won't pay for them but i can see i will have to pay to do the NVQ and AM2. any response would be appreciated . Also if i were to not do the NVQ and AM2 could i become a domestic installer and only work domestically and never on site. Would i be recognised as an electrician without the NVQ and AM2? thanks

    • @Pure_electrical_training
      @Pure_electrical_training  Před 2 lety +1

      The apprenticeship would have potentially been the quickest, most streamlined route to being considered qualified by the electrical industry.
      All of your training, including your workplace logbook (aka portfolio or NVQ) would have been paid for and you would have also stood the best chance at learning your trade from a qualified and competent electrician, while you earn.
      If the route you have chosen is full time college, you may have difficulty finding employment because you have very little site experience and a potential employer may see that as a disadvantage. Also, what you learned at college may not fully prepare you for the real world.
      There is no definition for an electrician, but to register with a competent person scheme to sign off notifiable work, you would need to meet their membership criteria.