Anonymous wrote:England and Scotland both have prestigious and less prestigious universities.
It's very common for English students to apply to Edinburgh and St. Andrews. It's less common for Scots to apply to universities south of their border, because they are more provincially minded generally and often "anti-English".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your point was that the chances for international students was “zero”. If you had said the chances for ANY student without A levels are zero, it would have been one thing.
So no, that is not what you said. But whatever…
No darling, the chances were zero if they were only bringing AP scores to the table. Read what I wrote again, you'll see I was in fact, that specfic.
I do genuinely applaud your son though, for what he achieved, most Americans can't get their heads around A levels, they don't usually have the intellectual capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Your point was that the chances for international students was “zero”. If you had said the chances for ANY student without A levels are zero, it would have been one thing.
So no, that is not what you said. But whatever…
Anonymous wrote:It is NOT zero. My son started in year 2 at Edinburgh in Math. We are from Texas.
He went to an AP school, but he registered for the A levels through Cambridge International and scored A*A*A*. (Maths, Further Math and Physics).
It is possible. But you have to be good and excel in your subject. DS was a little bit of a math prodigy. He studied for just 4 months independently and aced the A levels.
Anonymous wrote:I didnt konw you could start in year 2 of Scottish unis. is this just for A level RUK students? What are the chances an international student can start in year 2?
Anonymous wrote:Why do the English apply to Scottish unis?
Considering how cheap most English families are, what brings them to apply to a university system that takes an extra year to graduate vs England?