Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that's a study abroad, not a dual degreeAnonymous wrote:If your kid has wanted this school for years, it is with a heavy parent influence.
Look into Williams’ partnership with Oxford - for dual degrees.
It's also a waste to pay 90K a year for a Williams dual degree when you can pay 40K for Oxford as an international student enrolled there fully.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This link is right on the same page: https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/applying-to-oxford/for-international-students/international-qualificationsAnonymous wrote:The admissions has stuff like: A*AA including at least an A in Mathematics, with the A* in Mathematics, Further Mathematics or Computer Science.
or AA/AAB how does that translate to US AP classes?
Interestingly, imperial has stricter retirements for physics than Oxford.
Imperial is the MIT or Caltech of the UK. So maybe not surprising.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has wanted this school for years, it is with a heavy parent influence.
Look into Williams’ partnership with Oxford - for dual degrees.
OP here - I have never once influenced her dream. Can't a child have long term goals.
Anonymous wrote:This link is right on the same page: https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/applying-to-oxford/for-international-students/international-qualificationsAnonymous wrote:The admissions has stuff like: A*AA including at least an A in Mathematics, with the A* in Mathematics, Further Mathematics or Computer Science.
or AA/AAB how does that translate to US AP classes?
Interestingly, imperial has stricter retirements for physics than Oxford.
Anonymous wrote:Studying in the UK even at full pay international rates is a financial
bargain for families that would otherwise
be full pay in the US. 60k x 3 years versus 100k x 4 yrs
Anonymous wrote:My strong advise is to discourage focus on one particular university. It may be less of a crapshoot than the US, but there is still an element of luck, and you can be a good candidate and still not get in. There are many great colleges in the UK, US, and elsewhere. Just enjoy your subjects, study hard but not excessively, and you’ll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has wanted this school for years, it is with a heavy parent influence.
Look into Williams’ partnership with Oxford - for dual degrees.
OP here - I have never once influenced her dream. Can't a child have long term goals.
Yes, you can also encourage her to pursue her goals rather than doing the work for her. It's not that hard to google the question you asked.
But not a waste to pay for MIT and study abroad at Oxford: https://misti.mit.edu/university-oxford-direct-enroll#:~:text=The%20academic%20year%20at%20Oxford,terms%20(MIT's%20spring%20semester).Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:that's a study abroad, not a dual degreeAnonymous wrote:If your kid has wanted this school for years, it is with a heavy parent influence.
Look into Williams’ partnership with Oxford - for dual degrees.
It's also a waste to pay 90K a year for a Williams dual degree when you can pay 40K for Oxford as an international student enrolled there fully.
This link is right on the same page: https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/undergraduate/applying-to-oxford/for-international-students/international-qualificationsAnonymous wrote:The admissions has stuff like: A*AA including at least an A in Mathematics, with the A* in Mathematics, Further Mathematics or Computer Science.
or AA/AAB how does that translate to US AP classes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid has wanted this school for years, it is with a heavy parent influence.
Look into Williams’ partnership with Oxford - for dual degrees.
OP here - I have never once influenced her dream. Can't a child have long term goals.
Anonymous wrote:that's a study abroad, not a dual degreeAnonymous wrote:If your kid has wanted this school for years, it is with a heavy parent influence.
Look into Williams’ partnership with Oxford - for dual degrees.