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English, Maths or Science?

Which of the three following core subjects did you enjoy the most when you were at school?


  • Total voters
    126


Notters

Well-known member
Oct 20, 2003
24,889
Guiseley
I was asked by YouGov which I enjoyed most whilst I was at school. I was expecting a whitewash for science (particularly as it encompasses physics, chemistry and biology), so was surprised when the "live" results showed:

English 44%
Maths 23%
Science 23%
Don't know 10%

I thought everyone hated maths? I did A-level and I still wasn't a massive fan.

They also asked: "and which of the following core subjects do you think is most important for later life?"

English 47%
Maths 34%
Science 9%
Don't know 10%

Obviously we all need English in our day to day lives, but English at school was mostly English Literature wasn't it? Is that really more important than maths and science? I'm not saying any of them aren't important, but still.
 










Notters

Well-known member
Oct 20, 2003
24,889
Guiseley
O Level English was split into English Language and English Lit when I was a school. More emphasis on Language than Lit.

I suppose it was 50:50 for me (GCSE) but I've no idea what we did in the language part. I seem to recall just writing stories (which I hated).
 












KZNSeagull

Well-known member
Nov 26, 2007
21,093
Wolsingham, County Durham
Same here. Got both, but Language was the most important one.

I suppose it was 50:50 for me (GCSE) but I've no idea what we did in the language part. I seem to recall just writing stories (which I hated).

I dropped Lit in the end - had to read Pride and Prejudice, Macbeth and Canterbury Tales (I did not get that far!). Not a good choice of books for a 14 year olds really.
 




halbpro

Well-known member
Jan 25, 2012
2,902
Brighton
English. I'm not great at maths and while I like science I don't think it's taught very well at school, plus I was blessed with some very good English teachers at GCSE/A-Level
 




symyjym

Banned
Nov 2, 2009
13,138
Brighton / Hove actually
If you get a an English teacher, like I did at junior school, who teaches the rule "i before e except after c", you are more inclined to feel slightly dyslexic and even detached from the written language during the schooling years. It's the sort of teaching that damages potential.
 


jonny.rainbow

Well-known member
Oct 29, 2005
6,844
If you get a an English teacher, like I did at junior school, who teaches the rule "i before e except after c", you are more inclined to feel slightly dyslexic and even detached from the written language during the schooling years. It's the sort of teaching that damages potential.

Which alternative spelling strategies would you recommend?
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
Maths for me, and I went on to study it. It's a fascinating subject and can be very abstract at times.

But as for maths, English and science I'd say they're all important.
 






Stumpy Tim

Well-known member
I really enjoyed Maths, until I reached degree level - I dropped Maths as a subject after one week on the course... changed to straight Economics.

Always hated science with a passion, and never really enjoyed English much. I sometimes think I should have enjoyed English as I like reading & I enjoy writing. Unfortunately we had a teacher who all my mates really liked, but I thought was an alcoholic bell-end... one of those teachers who was more interested being cool than being a teacher. I heard he had a breakdown a few years after I left school

Looking back, it's all about the teacher. My Maths teachers were excellent, but my Science & English teachers were average/poor
 


Gullflyinghigh

Registered User
Apr 23, 2012
4,279
English is the clear winner for me, enjoyed both English Literature and English Language at school, carrying them on to A-level.

It would almost have been the perfect subject for me except I was made to read some utter toss at times, such as The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood. Mind-numbing dross with a message as subtle as having your face mashed with a brick.

I will concede that I never liked Maths, though this is likely due to my own innate laziness. I suspect I'd enjoy it now.

Science was alright but I really do believe that it's down to the teacher as to how much you get out of it/enjoy it. I had a succession of appalling chemistry ones, who managed to somehow make explosions dull. Biology was great fun and Physics was interesting but I couldn't relate to it that well at the time (see 'Maths' above).
 


Notters

Well-known member
Oct 20, 2003
24,889
Guiseley
Which alternative spelling strategies would you recommend?

A
agreeing
albeit
Alzheimer's
atheism
B
beige
Beijing
being
C
caffeine
concierge
D
deicide
deify
deign
deindustrialize
deity
disagreeing
dreeing
dreidel
E
eight
either
F
Fahrenheit
feign
feisty
foreign
foreseeing
forfeit
freight
G
geitost
gesundheit
H
heifer
height
heinous
heir
heist
herein
I
inveigle
K
kaleidoscope
keister
L
lei
leisure
M
madeira
meiosis
N
neigh
neighbor
neighbour
neither
O
obeisance
onomatopoeia
P
peine
protein
R
reign
reignite
reimburse
rein
reindeer
reindustrialize
reinforce
reinstall
reinvest
reisolate
reissue
S
safeish
scarabaeid
schlockmeister
science
seeing
seignorial
seine
seismic
seize
sensei
sheik
skein
sleigh
sleight
sovereign
stein
surfeit
surveillance
T
their
theism
therein
V
veil
vein
W
weigh
weight
weir
weird
wherein
whereinto
X
xanthein
Z
zeitgeist
zootheism
 




DavidinSouthampton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 3, 2012
17,351
English all the way.
I quite enjoyed Maths, and was quite good at it.
Hated Science - mostly because it was badly taught in the "good old" Grammar School Days where I was
 




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