You think an Oxford grad who read history is less knowledgeable than a typical Emory grad? |
True, in America the liberal arts curriculum is done in the first two years of college, while in Britain and Europe you generally take care of that in high school. |
THis, so you are testing in at a higher level at Oxbridge and are expected to show mastery in areas not yet taught in U.S. high school. In the Oxbridge application (you apply to only one), you must demonstrate why you want to "read history" and why they should select you to work with tutor X. There are also intense interviews which US students do poorly at. Once there, you are studying only the subject you applied to read. You don't switch majors. You are totally on your own. There is no hand-holding. |
False. Oxford doesn't like Americans. Only 1.7% of the students are from here. Yet the university is over 50% international students (most from China). From Google "The percentage of students from North America is far smaller at Oxford – only 200 out of 12,000 undergrads (1.7%).Feb 20, 2018" And dons are hard on Americans. I know of two M.Phil students who didn't score high enough to graduate. No warning. Nothing said from the tutors. Just "sorry - you failed - thanks for your two years of American bucks but your visa is now obsolete, go home". It can be a very tough place for Americans. |
I've never heard of this before so looked it up. I've got a kid who is a D.Phil candidate at Oxford now. He has mentioned only the Americans there getting M.Phils (a lot of them are biding time since American law schools want to see some maturity after college before coming to law school. So, there's a lot of LSAT prep going on in the grad dorms). Anyhow, the second undergraduate degree is available in medicine, it appears. I don't see any automatic elevation offered to a M.Phil. Check also to see if your federal (US) student loans can apply to that. My kid's Parent Plus loans were applicable to an Oxford D.Phil but I don't know if the U.S. feds will pay for a second undergraduate degree. The literature here says that British funding and loans are not applicable to the second undergraduate degree. https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/applying-to-oxford/second-undergraduate-degree |
Cambridge is the only school that MIT allows the transfers of letter grades from. My friends that did the exchange absolutely loved Cambridge and some went back for post-graduate studies. My roommate still lives there and is married and a British citizen now. |
It is very different. One is not better or worse, but they are different. US is rounder with a wider breadth of information. UK is much more in depth in the course of study. The way a student prepares matters. UK system your kid needs to be willing to be more independent. |
But, as a warning to other Americans, DPhils are not considered as rigorous as a PhD. I personally think it's BS as the reason is DPhils have to be completed in 3 years whereas American universities can force a PhD to be a student for a decade. So while I think it's total hogwash, there will be that discrimination coming back to the US. |
This is absurd. Some Americans expect their hands held and that does not happen. They don’t “dislike” Americans, they treat them like everyone else. If you don’t have a self-motivated student, it will be a bad fit. But a motivated student will do great. Sure, some kids used to hand-holding will not be successful, but their helicopter parents should have realized that before they sent them. If you want to be that kind of parent, be responsible enough to realize that isn’t how Oxbridge works. |
It's not absurd. Americans don't do well on the entrance exams. Their rate of acceptance is lower. Google it. What is the acceptance rate for Oxford for US citizens? It is low for everyone, but it seems to be slightly lower for Americans. On average Oxford has about a 16% admission rate, but for Americans it is just under 9%. Roughly half the average.Sep 9, 2013: |
Meh. DP here. I am an American who studied at LSE, which is very different from Oxbridge, but I dealt with the "they don't like Americans things." It's sorta true, for some profs and admins staff at least. I dealt with it by trying not to care - I was pretty much just there to take some time before law school - but if I'd cared, it would have been annoying. And I am very polite and rather quiet - not an ugly American - and a super independent learner. |
Actually the difference isn't "rigor", it's pedagogy. In the U.S. the doctorate program can drag out for many years during which the applicant tutors undergraduate students and is allegedly "taught" how to teach. That doesn't happen in the U.K. system. It's assumed already that you are smart enough to teach. You are there to take advantage of the libraries and to write a "brilliant" thesis of 75,000 words which you usually have to defend. |
Sorry, meant to say MPhil rather tfan MA. I'm American and default to that. Mist of my friends doing 2nd BA were on Rhodes or Marshall scholarships or very wealthy. My sistee is British and hot tge MPhil bump out of her BA at Cambridge. But, maybe tjings have changed. To the person who said UK students take care of liberal arts in high school, I disagree. I taught in further ed in the UK as well as attended Oxford. There just isn't an emphasis on liberal arts. I would say they cover the equivalent of first year coursework in A-levels, but not say they cover 2 years' worth or cover anything liberal arts. |
Before someone asks, the application requires THREE AP tests of 5 in the proposed area of study. And intense interviews on the subject you plan to study by professors in those fields. A lot of Americans can't meet those two criteria.
You need 1470 on the SAT (or 34 on the ACT), plus three SAT subject test (700 or better) or three APs (5 or better). for history, etc.), following by three interviews with a pair of academics. |
That's what American professors think, though, that a DPhil isn't as rigorous and isn't equivalent. I'm not saying that I agree with it, that's just the consensus among people who have a vested interest in keeping foreigners out of academia. It's the "mob" as far as I'm concerned (obviously I think academia is corrupt). |