To me the chief importance of the university open days is to
allow sixth formers to visualise themselves at university and to motivate them
to get the grades. Much of the hard
information can be picked up from the Guardian and Times League tables and the
prospectuses and websites, and you should do this beforehand.
For the calendar of open days http://www.opendays.com/
1)
Go on open days, but go on a Saturday to avoid
missing school lessons. Remember, you
can often arrange mini tours or tours using a phone app on a Saturday even if
you miss the full open day. Should your
child put that university down as one of their five, they then get a more
targeted open day in the spring term.
2)
As a parent, you don’t have to go to open days
with your child. They can hitch a lift
with a friend who’s going or can go by coach or train. This is valuable experience in being
independent. However, if they go only
with friends and without any adults, they often drift round in a group not
engaging with university staff and students.
3)
Get the programme and help your child to plan their
day and book any talks.
4)
Parents should stand back and encourage their
child to ask questions and have conversations.
5)
Sixth formers should attend the open day talk
about why you should study your subject.
Take notes. Write down quotes.
This is one of the questions you will be expected to answer in your
personal statement and they are giving you the answer. Ask the academics you meet what you should be
reading right now, and what are the most active areas of the subject currently.
Again, use this in your personal
statement.
6)
Ask the student guides about accommodation in
the second and third years – is there a pleasant student quarter and is it
reasonably priced? If you get this
wrong, your child might be condemned to living in a rough or distant part of
town.
7)
Engage with the establishment you are interested
in: do they offer short courses, summer school, essay prizes?
8)
Investigate disability support – mentoring,
extra time in exams, lectures online.
9)
Start to enquire about bursaries, prizes, awards
– these can be worth thousands.
10)
Killer question – the university staff and students
are there to promote their university – they won’t tell you the bad stuff
easily. However, the question which
slips under their guard is:
“If there was one thing you could change
about this university, what would it be?”
The answers are often revealing.
11)
Above all, take notes. One sixties university will blur into
another, as will the redbricks.
Especially make notes on accommodation blocks you visit – it may save
you a lengthy trip next summer when you have to decide.
Get Regular updates from My Moon-Shot
Like our Facebook Fan Page and receive notification of
new posts:
https://www.facebook.com/MyMoonShot
https://www.facebook.com/MyMoonShot
No comments:
Post a Comment