Congratuations! I'm applying for masters. So far I've received offers from imperial and UCL but I'm still a little upset because my grade is just a little higher than the conditions of the two unis , and I have not finished my graduation project yet. Just the day before yesterday I was rejected by Edinburgh, which made me feel confused, and means that if I did not meet the conditions of UCL or Imperial, I'll go to nowhere this year.
I left Uni over 20 years ago attending both Kings and QMU. Back then the Chem department was located at the Strand Campus. I struggled at Kings as it was poorly structured (lectures at odd times and at different parts of London too) and then moved to QMU (back then it had Westfield as a name attached to it). The teaching was so much better at QMU 10 hours of Lectures and 12 hours of practical in a purpose built building for Chem. Few years later due to funding both QMU and Kings axed the undergrad Chem degrees. So fast forward to your videos, I'm surprised to see both colleges have now reintroduced Chemistry.
heyy,I applied for 2022 entry(kcl,imperial,qmul,lsbu and manchester) and I am also international student and for now only got rejected by imperial🥲.It’s so nice to see someone from russia (or generaly Slavic countries)studying in Uk,best of luck.❤️
Hey Rohan!!! I hope you have an amazing journey!! I am a senior in high school. I also want to go to the UK for business management. I would really appreciate if you could guide me a little with a few things. 1. Why did you select Queen Mary? 2. What things you need to look for while selecting the uni for the required course ( business management) ? 3. Did you have any experience in business prior to applying? Like any internships or something. 4. Scholarships for undergraduate level. I really look forward to your response. Thank you!
@@roohbanikaur2424 heyy!! So I selected queen mary because of the location mainly as it is very close to central london and because it is a campus university too. See what I looked while selecting the university was the ranking and student reviews about the uni and the course. And in my high school I attended various workshops of business laws and taxation so if we show these things in our SOP it obviously gives a edge to our application and we don’t have to separately apply for scholarships as far as i know for queen mary they give scholarships according to our final grades that they look at. I hope this helped and best of luck!!
Hey Daria, I am applying this year to foundation courses, can you tell, generally, about how financials work in foundation year, then after progression to same university's bachelor's or another university? Is ther any way to fund your studies?
hi !! this video was so informative thank u (i've applied for the foundation year asw) + quick question, what did the offer ask u to achieve? was it a grade or something?
Hi! Thanks so much for this video, I felt it was very informative for a prospective student. I want to ask though, do you know of anyone who actually got accepted into ucl through this foundation? I hope to get a reply from you 😊
Congratulations on your offers!! I also applied to QMUL and UCL this year, and applied to Imperial last year! Have you decided for definite which offer to firm?💕
@@basicallydaria that’s sounds like a great choice, kings is a great uni and it helps that you’ve already got to know it a bit from your foundation year! Maybe I’ll see you round London in September haha x
I think imperial is just very selective. I really hoped to get there too, but other unis are good too) and we always can make masters or even phd in our dream uni, so I’m kinda fine about being rejected
Congrats on your offers, if its ok to ask, did your personal statement for king’s foundation was more focus on the foundation program or the bachelor that you intended to do?
Thanks! My personal statement for foundation was more about myself and what I want to achieve in future. But i didn’t focus on any of specific courses (both foundation and bachelors), it was more like in general
I decided that I want to study abroad only in the end of my last year of school and I knew what I want to do, so I didn’t really want to spend more time before bachelors. The only other opportunities that a levels could give me among uk are Cambridge, Oxford and probably imperial (but I could’ve got there with foundation at ucl). And as im planning to continue my degree after bachelors, im pretty fine that I’ve lost these opportunities. I can make there masters or phd, which are more valuable afaik
Hello I am planning to apply kings collage foundation and I couln't find any infomation about the process of appling and getting accepted by foundation programs other than web sites of king's and other universities tbh. Do you mind if i ask you a few questions about the process via a social platform because nobody knows about the topic around me sadly.. Thank u anyway
I applied in early January and got 4 decisions in like a month and 1 in almost 2 months. I think this year everything is much slower because of the extended deadline for universities (at least in the uk) 🥺
Why do so many children move to college in the UK? Is moving so hard? Why can’t parents always move to the city where their child has a university? If we say a child is 19-20 years old and his parents can’t move with him, isn’t it advisable to skip a year instead? How much do teachers in universities take care of children? How much attention are paid to them? Are they treated well? However, moving to a quasi-boarding school cannot be very good for children. Will the majority be able to resolve to move the child to where he is going to college?
I think the main reason why people go to another country to get higher education is the quality of education in their country. I moved to the UK mostly because the course I chose is not very good in my home country. For me, moving is kinda a part of adulting and being independent, so I don't really see the point of parents moving with their child in this case. Teachers in universities are not responsible for taking care of the students, and I do not think that people of age 19-20 are still children and can't be responsible for themselves (at least the majority of them). So I kinda don't really agree that moving to another country for university is a bad idea)
@@basicallydaria But then what is a 19-20 year old if you are not a child? Growing up doesn’t happen overnight to be an adult as soon as you turn 18. Teachers at the University that they are not responsible for children? Then who is responsible for them? Why are teachers there if they don’t take responsibility?
A 19 year old or 20 year old is not a child. Most university students look forward to being apart form parents. Its part of growing up. Most students move away from home at 18.
@@hemikiwi817 I didn’t expect troll answers ... A 19-20 year old toddler is still clearly a kid. Let’s say a 22-year-old is already a borderline case but for a 19-20-year-old child, it’s not a question of whether it’s a child.
you keep saying "children"... anyone who is 18+ is an ADULT. not a child. in life, they will ALWAYS be treated as an adult. why would a parent move to a whole different country with them? do these parents not have their own lives? once you're 18, you're an adult. point, blank, period. all your life you've been "growing up" and at a certain age (18) you've done majority of that growing and will now become an adult.
Damn, such high quality for such a small channel.
Thanks💓💓
Congratuations! I'm applying for masters. So far I've received offers from imperial and UCL but I'm still a little upset because my grade is just a little higher than the conditions of the two unis , and I have not finished my graduation project yet. Just the day before yesterday I was rejected by Edinburgh, which made me feel confused, and means that if I did not meet the conditions of UCL or Imperial, I'll go to nowhere this year.
Congratulations on your offers!
Thank you ❤️
I left Uni over 20 years ago attending both Kings and QMU. Back then the Chem department was located at the Strand Campus. I struggled at Kings as it was poorly structured (lectures at odd times and at different parts of London too) and then moved to QMU (back then it had Westfield as a name attached to it). The teaching was so much better at QMU 10 hours of Lectures and 12 hours of practical in a purpose built building for Chem. Few years later due to funding both QMU and Kings axed the undergrad Chem degrees. So fast forward to your videos, I'm surprised to see both colleges have now reintroduced Chemistry.
heyy,I applied for 2022 entry(kcl,imperial,qmul,lsbu and manchester) and I am also international student and for now only got rejected by imperial🥲.It’s so nice to see someone from russia (or generaly Slavic countries)studying in Uk,best of luck.❤️
🥰🥰🥰
congrats on your offers! i'll be starting a masters in clinical neuroscience at king's college this year :)
Thank you! That's so cool. Maybe we'll meet one day haha :)
Hey congratulations on ur offer!! I will be going to queen mary this year for business management course. Hope u have a great time in uni❤️
Thanks! hope you'll have a nice time at uni too)
Hey Rohan!!!
I hope you have an amazing journey!!
I am a senior in high school. I also want to go to the UK for business management. I would really appreciate if you could guide me a little with a few things.
1. Why did you select Queen Mary?
2. What things you need to look for while selecting the uni for the required course ( business management) ?
3. Did you have any experience in business prior to applying? Like any internships or something.
4. Scholarships for undergraduate level.
I really look forward to your response.
Thank you!
@@roohbanikaur2424 heyy!!
So I selected queen mary because of the location mainly as it is very close to central london and because it is a campus university too. See what I looked while selecting the university was the ranking and student reviews about the uni and the course. And in my high school I attended various workshops of business laws and taxation so if we show these things in our SOP it obviously gives a edge to our application and we don’t have to separately apply for scholarships as far as i know for queen mary they give scholarships according to our final grades that they look at.
I hope this helped and best of luck!!
@@rohanrai2974 I truly appreciate your response and thank you for sharing! It helped.
Congrats on your offers! 🎉 Maybe we'll see each other around at KCL this Sept.
Thank you!
Hey Daria,
I am applying this year to foundation courses, can you tell, generally, about how financials work in foundation year, then after progression to same university's bachelor's or another university? Is ther any way to fund your studies?
I do not understand how you can afford these universities especially as an international student
hi !! this video was so informative thank u (i've applied for the foundation year asw) + quick question, what did the offer ask u to achieve? was it a grade or something?
Amazing experience
Hi! Thanks so much for this video, I felt it was very informative for a prospective student. I want to ask though, do you know of anyone who actually got accepted into ucl through this foundation? I hope to get a reply from you 😊
Congratulations on your offers!! I also applied to QMUL and UCL this year, and applied to Imperial last year! Have you decided for definite which offer to firm?💕
Thank you! I’m still not really sure but I think that my firm will be neuroscience&psychology at kings and as insurance chemistry at kings
@@basicallydaria that’s sounds like a great choice, kings is a great uni and it helps that you’ve already got to know it a bit from your foundation year! Maybe I’ll see you round London in September haha x
@@basicallydaria The most incredible degree fraud in the history of UK
th-cam.com/video/3XLalsMcqkQ/w-d-xo.html
ehehh i got rejected by imperial tooo TvT i made a video on it too but hmmmm dream school gone goodbye :((
I think imperial is just very selective. I really hoped to get there too, but other unis are good too) and we always can make masters or even phd in our dream uni, so I’m kinda fine about being rejected
Congrats on your offers, if its ok to ask, did your personal statement for king’s foundation was more focus on the foundation program or the bachelor that you intended to do?
Thanks! My personal statement for foundation was more about myself and what I want to achieve in future. But i didn’t focus on any of specific courses (both foundation and bachelors), it was more like in general
did you consider enrolling into A level studies instead of foundation studies? It's one year longer but may open more options
I decided that I want to study abroad only in the end of my last year of school and I knew what I want to do, so I didn’t really want to spend more time before bachelors.
The only other opportunities that a levels could give me among uk are Cambridge, Oxford and probably imperial (but I could’ve got there with foundation at ucl). And as im planning to continue my degree after bachelors, im pretty fine that I’ve lost these opportunities. I can make there masters or phd, which are more valuable afaik
Hello I am planning to apply kings collage foundation and I couln't find any infomation about the process of appling and getting accepted by foundation programs other than web sites of king's and other universities tbh. Do you mind if i ask you a few questions about the process via a social platform because nobody knows about the topic around me sadly.. Thank u anyway
Sure! You can dm me on Instagram daariiushka ☺️
I am currently waiting on one more school to get back to me... how long did you have to wait for your offers??
I applied in early January and got 4 decisions in like a month and 1 in almost 2 months. I think this year everything is much slower because of the extended deadline for universities (at least in the uk) 🥺
Why do so many children move to college in the UK? Is moving so hard? Why can’t parents always move to the city where their child has a university? If we say a child is 19-20 years old and his parents can’t move with him, isn’t it advisable to skip a year instead? How much do teachers in universities take care of children? How much attention are paid to them? Are they treated well? However, moving to a quasi-boarding school cannot be very good for children. Will the majority be able to resolve to move the child to where he is going to college?
I think the main reason why people go to another country to get higher education is the quality of education in their country. I moved to the UK mostly because the course I chose is not very good in my home country. For me, moving is kinda a part of adulting and being independent, so I don't really see the point of parents moving with their child in this case. Teachers in universities are not responsible for taking care of the students, and I do not think that people of age 19-20 are still children and can't be responsible for themselves (at least the majority of them). So I kinda don't really agree that moving to another country for university is a bad idea)
@@basicallydaria But then what is a 19-20 year old if you are not a child? Growing up doesn’t happen overnight to be an adult as soon as you turn 18. Teachers at the University that they are not responsible for children? Then who is responsible for them? Why are teachers there if they don’t take responsibility?
A 19 year old or 20 year old is not a child. Most university students look forward to being apart form parents. Its part of growing up. Most students move away from home at 18.
@@hemikiwi817 I didn’t expect troll answers ... A 19-20 year old toddler is still clearly a kid. Let’s say a 22-year-old is already a borderline case but for a 19-20-year-old child, it’s not a question of whether it’s a child.
you keep saying "children"... anyone who is 18+ is an ADULT. not a child. in life, they will ALWAYS be treated as an adult. why would a parent move to a whole different country with them? do these parents not have their own lives? once you're 18, you're an adult. point, blank, period. all your life you've been "growing up" and at a certain age (18) you've done majority of that growing and will now become an adult.