Uncle Buck
Ghost Writer
- Jul 7, 2003
- 28,075
And do you get marks deducted for "overuse"?
One would hope so.
And do you get marks deducted for "overuse"?
I wasn't suggesting you can't have a good life without GCSE's. The opposite in fact so thanks for proving my point.
Oh I see. The reverse psychology thing? well done. I don't see that I need to post anymore in this thread. I only have one opinion on GCSE's and I've said it several times. They are easy.
au contraire
I have lots now, but found them very difficult at the time, not "piss easy".
Please dont stop posting. I am trying to debug a programme and your posts are relieving the tedium.
there you go again
:yahoo::yahoo::yahoo::yahoo::yahoo:
I tend to agree with Nibble here, the GCSE's were well easy in my day. Everyone I know did very little revision and scored well. I would think it's fair to say that those that don't at least pass GCSE's are a bit stupid in the head.
does this mean there will be stacks of 16 year olds about in town tonight hindering me in my casual attempts to get inebriated??
I think the issue is that everyone says GCSE's are getting easier but whether they are or aren't it shouldn't really be relevant.
I am certainly not a big believer in the fact that everyone should go on to further full time education but at the end of the day employers will only really look at your results in the highest form of education you did. Therefore your GCSE's nowadays will dictate what you do next. Low scores and you'll be best to do vocational couses in trades and such like, high scores and you'll be more likely to do A-Levels.
From there if you do a course in plumbing a potential employer will only care what you did in your plumbing course. If you did A-levels, a potential employer or Uni will only care what you did at college not school.
At the end of the day, after about 5 years your employment history will take precendent over anything else. A member of my family left school about 30 years ago with about 2 C's at GCSE and is now an Area Manager for a national company.
GCSE's are not essential to the rest of your life, they only affect what you do short term and unless you didn't get the results you need to do something you really want to do don't panic
does this mean there will be stacks of 16 year olds about in town tonight hindering me in my casual attempts to get inebriated??
That isn't (or rather wasn't) the real problem though, in that they in no way prepared you for doing A levels - which were a light year away in terms of difficulty and the amount of work you have to do from GCSE.
I'd be interested to hear people who have gone through the system more recently - does that gulf in the standards between GCSE and A level still exist?
Barney, still up for that Orange Juice and Lemonade?
I would say they are not pointless by a long way as you need them to get to college, but once your there and doing A levels they pretty much become pretty irelevent, they will not help you into uni and if your taking A levels your employer i imagine would take very little intrest in what gcses you have, bar possible Maths and English.
For those who dont get the gcses they wanted and dont get into college its not the end of the world! you just have to work a bit harder resit them if college is what YOU want to do and not what you mates are doing. or its just time to pull your finger out get a cheeky little job whilst trying to work out what you do want to do, no harm in that imo but dont just give up.
Anyway, i doubt anyone will agree just my point of view and how i see things looking back, i wish i hadnt of gone to college as it was a couple of years of dossing and could of been doing somthing i really wanted to and left it until i was about 19 before i realised what i wanted to do, but if you work at it things do/will be all good in the hood.
yeah mate i'm frackin hungover, and the fridge is empty i'd love an OJ
Anyway, i doubt anyone will agree just my point of view and how i see things
yeah i agree munk, but ruddy hell that seemed like a lot of effort that post for a thursday morning