Academic funding and general academia chat

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There is a hint that you’re saying ‘just focusing on one or two subjects” is less work though? I do get what you’re saying about juggling the workload and timetabling of lots of different courses
 
There is a hint that you’re saying ‘just focusing on one or two subjects” is less work though? I do get what you’re saying about juggling the workload and timetabling of lots of different courses
Not necessarily, but in the UK there are a lot of ungraded assignments. Even if the assignment is mandatory, if it doesn't count towards your grade you don't have to worry about correctness, so if something comes up, you can slap something together and revisit the material later. In the US, ungraded assignments are not a very common thing. They give us mock exams and problems that would be nice to practice, but that's considered study material, not homework. Our actual homework is graded for correctness, so if something comes up and you slap something together and it's all wrong, you get a zero, and that goes toward your final grade which goes on your official transcript. They assign the material on a weekly basis at my university, so we don't usually have the opportunity to get a head start on it if we know something is going to come up later. Other universities do sometimes give students access to all course materials at the beginning of the semester, though.

That is to say, in the UK, a lot of your grade is dependent on a few exams or essays, so theoretically, you could slack off until exams and still get your degree. I wouldn't recommend it as they give you those ungraded assignments for a reason and you do need to take the time to learn the content, but it's theoretically possible. In the US, for most courses, if you fail to complete 1 weekly assignment you could go from 90% to a 70% overnight and you can't pass a course in your major or minor with less than 70%. That means if you are a student who likes independent study, but you don't do too well with constant assignments and obligations, you may do better in the UK. If you are a bad test taker, but you're good at juggling a lot of assignments you may do better in the US.
 
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Oh fair enough! Thank you for your great replies, they’re so detailed.
No problem! I've always found it interesting that the UK and the US have completely different systems for secondary school, but by the time one exits university, there's not a noticeable difference in education level.
 
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100% Ruby wouldn’t have made it out of undergrad unless she had the AP exams wave her science / math requirements. Gen-Ed courses are the reason why my GPA is generally so low (3.4) to my major GPA (3.8) I’d probably waltz out with a 1:1 in the UK if it wasn’t for my damn dyscalculia