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Applying to University The UCAS Process

Applying to University The UCAS Process. UCAS – The System. University Central Admissions System www.ucas.com All UK applications to university are made using this online system. Very helpful website with key sections for students, parents and teachers/advisors.

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Applying to University The UCAS Process

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  1. Applying to UniversityThe UCAS Process

  2. UCAS – The System • University Central Admissions System • www.ucas.com • All UK applications to university are made using this online system. • Very helpful website with key sections for students, parents and teachers/advisors. • Customer Services 0871 468 0 468 • Students should always have their UCAS ID number if contacting UCAS or universities.

  3. UCAS Deadlines for 2013 entry • October 15th 2012 • Medicine, Vet Med, Dentistry, Oxbridge. • January 15th 2013 for other courses. • March date for some Art courses. • Our internal deadlines are September 28th and October 25th to give time for checking and writing/adding reference.

  4. UCAS Website • http://www.ucas.com/

  5. Helping students to choose a course • UCAS Convention & Seminars (today!) • Higher Ideas software in school • UCAS website and the Stamford Test • Personal Research • A careers interview in school • University Open Days • Prospectuses • Links from Rossett School Website (Sixth Form section)

  6. Choose your courses and institutions • Five choices, no order of preference. • Not advisable to choose widely differing courses – the same personal statement is sent to each institution. • Each university does not ‘see’ your other choices. • For Oxford or Cambridge you can apply early and then add the other 4 choices after.

  7. Oxbridge, Dentistry, Medicine and Veterinary Medicine. • no more than four choices in any one of the following three areas: (i)medicine; (ii)dentistry; (iii) veterinary medicine or veterinary science • no more than one choice for Oxford University or the University of Cambridge (there is an exception to this but only for graduate applications).

  8. Other factors to consider : • Interest • Modular vs linear; • Sandwich course/year in industry/abroad. • Flexibility e.g ability to transfer to a different degree if desired. • UCAS points/grades required – do they match UCAS predicted grades? • At this time we have not made the predicted grades so as a guide I suggest students use their target grades.

  9. UCAS Predicted grades/target grades? • All students have a target grade set at the top 25th percentile based on ALPS. • This is where we would like them to aspire to. • The UCAS predicted grade is what we think students are going to get – hopefully they are the same! • However, the UCAS grade can be higher or lower than the school’s target grade – it all depends on progress in that subject.

  10. UCAS Tariff • Each A level grade is ‘worth’ a different number of UCAS points:

  11. Entry Requirements • Sometimes this is stated in terms of grades. • Sometimes specific A levels and specific grades. • Sometimes points score – but the points only ‘count’ once. • E.g. AAB and C at AS would give 120+120+100+40=380 points • Read very carefully.

  12. The application form. • Completed online, can complete different parts in different order. Some sections time out after about 40 minutes so make sure the application is saved. • Main sections are • Registration • Personal details (no silly email addresses) • Additional information • Course choices • Education (i.e. qualifications) • Personal Statement

  13. The Personal Statement • 47 lines, 4000 characters (includes spaces) • Approximately three quarters of a page of typed A4, arial 12 point. • Use the websites to look for the key qualities/skills/attributes the university is looking for. • Sometimes this is included on the UCAS website as the ‘career entry profile’. • Tutor support and checked thoroughly.

  14. The Personal Statement continued.. • Must be student’s own work. • Must be able to say why they want to study that subject. • Must use examples to evidence their qualities. • Must be in continuous prose. • Useful guide on UCAS website • http://www.ucas.com/students/applying/howtoapply/personalstatement/whattoinclude

  15. Hints & Tips. • Start the whole process early – use the next few weeks and the Summer holidays to encourage students to research courses. • UCAS Points/Grades – are they being realistic? • Consider courses carefully – can students say convincingly why they wish to apply for this course? • Link experiences to skills acquired/attributes demonstrated – don’t list.

  16. TIMELINE • June/July – register with UCAS & search for courses. Attend Open days, speak to staff, careers advisers and carry out personal research. • August – begin to draft personal statement, making lists of work experience, volunteering, paid work and hobbies and link this to skills/qualities you have demonstrated or gained. • September – get predicted grades for A levels at beginning of term and refine your course choice decision. Write personal statement, using help from Realsmart, UCAS website and tutors as well as family/friends. • Complete Personal Statement in WORD.

  17. Timeline continued.. • Friday 28 September 2012- School deadline for applications for Oxbridge, Medicine, Dentistry and Veterinary science. • Thursday 25th October 2012- School deadline for all other applications. • There is some evidence that there is an advantage to applying early. • For many courses Universities do make offers to early applicants even before Jan 15th deadline.

  18. Pay & Send • Once the online form is completed and checked by us we will tell students they are ready to ‘pay & send’. • This means it is sent to their referee (which is technically Ms Harland or Mrs Grabham) for the reference to be added. • Payment must be by credit, debit or solo card. • £23 for 5 choices, £12 for one choice. • We need time to add the reference. Once added, we allow students to read the reference then we send it off to UCAS.

  19. How Parents Can Help. • Help with drafting and checking spelling, punctuation and grammar. • Read their personal statements. Do they sound passionate/interested in their degree subject? Can they evidence their passion? • What have they read, done, experienced that has helped them gain an insight into their course?

  20. How Parents Can Help. • Keeping an eye on the deadline of October 25th. (September 28th for early UCAS deadline) • Help with course searches and researching funding and accommodation.

  21. Any questions?

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