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Calvin Asks: Is having Physics A-level a 'must have' to do an Engineering Degree?

My son wants to be an engineer when he grows up. He is doing his GCSE’s this year and getting ready to choose his A-Levels, but his school has a new physics teacher, whom he HATES! He is now adamant he won’t be choosing physics at A-Level, but I’m worried that he’ll struggle to get onto an engineering course at a good university without it.


He doesn’t want to change schools as all his friends are staying; it’s one of the best schools in the area and local too, so I don’t really want him to have to move either. So my question is, does he need a physics A-Level or can he get by without it?


A-Level dilemmas - Darlington

 
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Parents
  • What is sneaky is that some universities demand TWO facilitating A Level subjects. Mathematics and physics are both facilitating. There have been cases when applicants for degrees in computer science (and similar courses) have been rejected because they have mathematics and computer science or mathematics and electronics as A Levels but they would probably have been accepted if instead of computer science or electronics they had chemistry, history, or even Latin because they are facilitating subjects despite them being less relevant to the degree course.
Reply
  • What is sneaky is that some universities demand TWO facilitating A Level subjects. Mathematics and physics are both facilitating. There have been cases when applicants for degrees in computer science (and similar courses) have been rejected because they have mathematics and computer science or mathematics and electronics as A Levels but they would probably have been accepted if instead of computer science or electronics they had chemistry, history, or even Latin because they are facilitating subjects despite them being less relevant to the degree course.
Children
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