One of the most honest and balanced review I have ever seen on TH-cam. You have done amazingly well considering you have moved overseas and during the pandemic. I am sure you are learning more about yourself every day!
Thanks for the kind comment! I personally didn't use any specific books for the BMAT, and relied on past year papers and practice. I think it can be quite useful to keep up-to-date with medicine / health-related news if you are intending to do the medicine / health-related question in the writing task. If not, general knowledge and writing skills should be sufficient! If you are looking for a guide book, I would recommend "How to Master the BMAT" by Christopher See. All the best!
Thanks! I got into my choice college, but yes, it's quite common to be allocated to another college, as happened to quite a number of my friends here. At the end of the day, it doesn't matter that much as most people grow to love their college, and you can always visit your friends in other colleges (in non-covid times) :)
Hi, I'm not really active on IG as I try to minimise my social media usage! You can contact me via email, or let me know what kind of content you would like to see in the future if I were to set up an IG account :)
Thank you! Sure, you can see glimpses of my college in Oxford from my previous videos - First Week in Oxford vlog (th-cam.com/video/fwmpW5U8EIU/w-d-xo.html) and room tour (th-cam.com/video/Z80cfXVVqfs/w-d-xo.html) :)
I have some questions about studying at Oxford! Sorry if too much :-)) 1. Why did you choose Oxford rather than other unis, imperial ucl, Cambridge .. etc 2. What are pros and cons of being here 3. Is the study tough and rlly rlly hard to get in? 4. What are the fees of studying at Oxford for an international student with a medical degree? Like undergrads // postgrads? And why did you choose to be here since some tests may be varied out in each country. Thank you for your infos in advanced!! 😘❤️
1. I chose Oxford because it's ranked the best for medicine, with significantly lower tuition fees than Cambridge for international students. Having visited Oxford before, I fell in love with the city and knew it was a place I would enjoy living and studying at. 2. Pros: convenience (Oxford city is very small, most places are within walking or cycling distance), beautiful architecture, great libraries and facilities, lovely parks, etc... (not sure which aspects you want to know about?) Cons: high cost of living (but quite typical for the UK), can't really think of much else 3. Yes it's academically challenging (should be quite obvious) and yes you'd have to be academically capable to get in (but this varies a bit depending on the course you're applying to). A lot hinges on your application and admissions tests / written work for some courses + interviews. 4. www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/courses-listing/medicine (increases slightly every year)
One of the most honest and balanced review I have ever seen on TH-cam. You have done amazingly well considering you have moved overseas and during the pandemic. I am sure you are learning more about yourself every day!
Thank you so much and I agree!! :")
I love this video! As another Oxford Uni int'l student, I related a lot to these points! ❤️
hope ur doing well!! see u at the end of the year 🤩
love this video! hope you have a lovely Christmas ZQ❤️
Thank you and you too! :")❤️
knowledge full video one day you will be a best youtuber ♥
good review hope HT is better
Take care of yourself💞
Please be happy :) keep it up
please do a room tour of decorated room
loved your all videos alot ZQ ❤️....could you please elaborate about which books or stuffs i have to go through to develop my writing in BMAT ?
Thanks for the kind comment! I personally didn't use any specific books for the BMAT, and relied on past year papers and practice. I think it can be quite useful to keep up-to-date with medicine / health-related news if you are intending to do the medicine / health-related question in the writing task. If not, general knowledge and writing skills should be sufficient! If you are looking for a guide book, I would recommend "How to Master the BMAT" by Christopher See. All the best!
@@ZQmedicinspires Thank you ,I will definitely look into it.
Congratulations for coming so far! Was your college a choice one or were you allocated which I hear is quite common?
Thanks! I got into my choice college, but yes, it's quite common to be allocated to another college, as happened to quite a number of my friends here. At the end of the day, it doesn't matter that much as most people grow to love their college, and you can always visit your friends in other colleges (in non-covid times) :)
whats ur ig? 👉🏻👈🏻🥺
Hi, I'm not really active on IG as I try to minimise my social media usage! You can contact me via email, or let me know what kind of content you would like to see in the future if I were to set up an IG account :)
It's good. I like the way you talk. Keep it up. I am also too excited to see Oxford. Can you see your collage to us.Please reply
Thank you! Sure, you can see glimpses of my college in Oxford from my previous videos - First Week in Oxford vlog (th-cam.com/video/fwmpW5U8EIU/w-d-xo.html) and room tour (th-cam.com/video/Z80cfXVVqfs/w-d-xo.html) :)
I have some questions about studying at Oxford! Sorry if too much :-))
1. Why did you choose Oxford rather than other unis, imperial ucl, Cambridge .. etc
2. What are pros and cons of being here
3. Is the study tough and rlly rlly hard to get in?
4. What are the fees of studying at Oxford for an international student with a medical degree? Like undergrads // postgrads? And why did you choose to be here since some tests may be varied out in each country. Thank you for your infos in advanced!! 😘❤️
1. I chose Oxford because it's ranked the best for medicine, with significantly lower tuition fees than Cambridge for international students. Having visited Oxford before, I fell in love with the city and knew it was a place I would enjoy living and studying at.
2. Pros: convenience (Oxford city is very small, most places are within walking or cycling distance), beautiful architecture, great libraries and facilities, lovely parks, etc... (not sure which aspects you want to know about?) Cons: high cost of living (but quite typical for the UK), can't really think of much else
3. Yes it's academically challenging (should be quite obvious) and yes you'd have to be academically capable to get in (but this varies a bit depending on the course you're applying to). A lot hinges on your application and admissions tests / written work for some courses + interviews.
4. www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/courses-listing/medicine (increases slightly every year)
More on why I chose Oxford: www.medicinspires.com/why-oxford-an-international-students-perspective/
You are lucky. Because you have no dislike