It depends what route you take. If you want to study engineering at university, you probably need A’s to C’s at A-level, in Maths and probably another science. There are lots of engineering apprenticeships – for those you need A* to C grades at GCSE.
Popular engineering courses will need good grades (A’s and B’s) in Maths and a science subject. For most engineering courses you will need Physics but for Chemical Engineering you need Chmisty (obvious enough, I guess).
In Scotland, where I work, it’s a it different. It takes four years to Bachelor level (and 5 to Masters level); in the rest of the UK it takes a year less. If you have A-levels, it means you can directly enter the course in the 2nd year in Scotland….or if you’re grades are a little lower than the 2nd year entrance standard you can go into the 1st year.
Hi @ xkY3x. Each university will have its own entry requirements, so this would require a bit of investigation. A typical offer from the University of Manchester would be two A’s and a B at A-level. The grades reflect how popular a course is. If the grades are high, the course is very popular and is likely to be very good! Maths and Physics are important subjects to study.
Comments
DMCaidan11 commented on :
sorry about him he kind of copeyed mu question :}
xkY3x commented on :
thank you for answering my question 🙂