Navigation

Tollbar Telegraph

News Archives



    Bookmark Us
    Print This Page  

 

  • Grimsby and District Netball
    Extract from Grimsby Telegraph Friday 18 April 2008It was a clean sweep for Tollbar BEC’s ...

  • Tollbar Talent Show
    This year’s Tollbar Talent Show will be held in the Music/Conference Hall on:Wednesday 30t...





  • 'Most Improved'
    ‘MOST IMPROVED' Tollbar Business And Enterprise College, New Waltham, was also named among...

  • Pupils Scoop Prizes And Learn So Much
    Community-minded kids have been praised at a ceremony at Tollbar Business And Enterprise C...





  • Annual Primary Basketball Festival
    Teams from nine primary schools descended on Tollbar BEC sports hall for the annual Primar...

  • BBC News Day
    Tollbar BEC Year 7s will be making the news on March 13.That is the day that BBC News Scho...





  • Budding Authors
    Press Cutting from Life – Thursday 28 February 2008.Budding authors from Tollbar Business ...

  • Cross Country
    Sophie Lake will be quite happy if it rains on March 8.This is the day that the Tollbar Ye...





  • New Year Concert
    Tollbar’s latest concert was a double celebration, welcoming the new year and marking the ...

  • Prom Fashion Show
    For 12 Tollbar students, a fashion show brought an early taste of what to expect at the su...





Major universities warn ‘soft’ A-level students


January 9th, 2008

Press article from The Daily Telegraph 7 January 2008

Major universities warn ‘soft’ A-level students

Institutions including Cambridge and the London School of Economics have drawn up lists of subjects they say are not academically rigorous enough.

They give warning that candidates taking more than one A-level in areas such as media studies, dance, sports studies and travel and tourism are unlikely to be given a place.

Admissions tutors insist that the courses – which have undergone a huge expansion in state schools in recent years – often fail to prepare sixth-formers for the academic demands of university.

The disclosure will alarm ministers, who want to increase the number of students from state school going to the top universities.

It may also undermine the Government’s drive to promote new–style diplomas in subjects such as hair and beauty, media or hospitality, which are being introduced as an alternative to GCSE’s and A-levels.

THE B LIST FOR UNDERGRADUATES

Taking more than one of the following A-levels will limit students’ chances of getting to Cambridge

Accounting

Information & Communication Technology

Art & Design

Leisure Studies

Business Studies

Media Studies

Communication Studies

Music Technology

Dance

Performance Studies

Design & Technology

Performing Arts

Drama & Theatre Studies

Photography

Film Studies

Physical Education

Health & Social Care

Sports Studies

Home Economics

Travel & Tourism

It is feared that concerns over so-called ‘soft’ A-levels may be extended to the Government’s flagship diplomas.

One admissions tutor at a top university said yesterday: “These are vocational qualifications, and whilst good vocational qualifications are a badly needed part of the nation’s qualification mix at 14 to 19, they do not qualify people to pursue purely academic programmes at academically selective universities.”


Previous Page