Toot Hill College UCAS Parent Information Evening Tuesday 16 th June 2015.

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Presentation transcript:

Toot Hill College UCAS Parent Information Evening Tuesday 16 th June 2015

Overview 1.What UCAS is and how it works 2.What TCAS is and how it works 3.What your child has done in school and how you can support them at home

Universities and Colleges Admissions System All students who apply for university must do so via the UCAS process.

UCAS Timeline 15 October: Application deadline for medicine, dentistry, veterinary medicine, veterinary science and Oxford and Cambridge. 15 January: Application deadline for all courses except those above and art and design courses. 24 March: Application deadline for art and design courses. However: College deadline for Russell Group applications will be Friday 23 rd October (day before half term) as these are the most competitive courses and early deadlines get better results. HOWEVER: College deadline for all applications will be Friday 27 th November as early entries get better results. End of Summer Term: Introduce students and parents to UCAS process; -research courses -begin writing personal statements Beginning of Autumn Term: Students to register with UCAS and apply

How UCAS process works It requires the students to: 1.Research and select universities and courses 2.Write a personal statement about themselves. It also requires the school to: 3. Put forward predicted grades for each student in their Year 13 subjects. 4. Write an individual UCAS reference for each student.

1. Selecting universities and courses 1.Tariff points 2.How to research courses on UCAS 3.University prospectuses and Open Days

Entry Requirements / Tariff tables Tariff PointsA2 LevelAS Level 140A* 120A B 90 80C 70 60DA 50B 40EC 30D 20E

Entry Requirements / Tariff tables Tariff PointsBTEC Diploma (Double)BTEC Subsidiary Diploma (Single) 280D*D* 260D*D 240DD DM MM 140D* 120MPD PPM P 20

Researching courses on UCAS WITH some idea?: Home (  ‘Find a course’  ‘Find an undergraduate course’  Where do you normally live? ‘England’ Search courses available in: ‘2016’  Search by any or all of the following: Course: Course title / Subject Provider: University / College / Other Location: Country / County / City / Town

Researching courses on UCAS WITHOUT any idea?: Home (  ‘Find a course’  ‘Find an undergraduate course’  ‘Don’t know what to study?’ ‘Browse’  EITHER: ‘Browse subjects by category’  OR: ‘Go to A-Z list of subjects’

University prospectuses and Open Days Many university prospectuses in bookcase in Study Atrium. University prospectuses can be easily ordered off any university website. Open Days can be found at

2. Writing Personal Statements 1. What are personal statements 2. Key tips, guides and support

Personal Statement: The basics Attached to the UCAS application. Read by university admissions officer(s). Forms part of the evidence they use to decide to offer a place. It is the only part of the application process written by the student characters or 47 lines. A very useful website is It must answer the question: Why should YOU be given a place on this course?

Personal Statements - What have students done today? 1.Personal Statement Ideas Generator 2.Top tips on how to write a personal statement 3.Personal statement exemplars 4.Started writing them 5.Ideally – write most of them before coming back in Autumn Term

Personal Statements: What to include? Everything must be relevant to question: ‘Why should YOU be given a place on this course’? There is no ‘formula’ – it is a ‘personal’ statement. Everyone’s will be different. Nevertheless, the following areas are usually expected somewhere: -A short, strong opening paragraph -A clear explanation of why you want to study this course -Your proven achievements that show you are capable of studying the course -Evidence that you have taken an interest in the course beyond the classroom -Additional knowledge relevant to the course (e.g. other subjects?) -Additional skills relevant to the course (i.e. ‘transferable skills’) -Enrichment activities relevant to the course 75% should be directly focused on your academic ability to study the course. 25% should be focused on additional enrichment activities (and these should be made clearly relevant to the course).

6 Top Tips: DO: 1.Research your chosen courses (or profession) in detail. * Check the university website – many include what they are looking for in Personal Statements from their admissions tutors. -What specific topics do they include? -Which are compulsory? -What options do you have? Which would you pick? -Do they mention any particular skills you will need to have? -Do they mention what they are looking for in a candidate? -How are they assessed? Is it all exams? Is there an option to do a thesis? E.g.  Search for courses  Undergraduate  History  Aberdeen  History  Course catalogue

Top Tips: DO: 2. Be specific. *Give specific examples to support everything you say. 3. Explain why everything you write is relevant to: ‘why should YOU be given a place on this course’? A – Action – what specifically have you done? Include DETAIL. B – Benefit – what have you gained or learnt from this? Be SPECIFIC. C – Course – how exactly does this then make you a good candidate for the course? Make sure it is RELEVANT.

Top Tips: DO: 4. Lead with your strongest points. -Talk about your greatest achievements first, don’t leave them until last! -(It might be that an admissions tutor doesn’t get this far)

Top Tips: DO: 5. Be unique (but not ‘weird’!) What do you have to offer that no one else has? What makes you stand out?

Top Tips: DO: 6. Proof read your work. -Or ask a friend / relative to do it. -NO spelling mistakes -NO grammar mistakes

3. Predicted Grades 1. How these will be set in school

Predicted Grades 1.Predicted grades in a subject will automatically be set at the overall grade a student achieves at the end of Year If a student wants to increase this prediction by one grade only, they can complete a ‘Changing Predicted Grades’ form. 3.If a student wants the chance to increase this prediction by more than one grade, they must produce work to this standard in the same conditions they will be assessed in at the end of Year 13.

Changing UCAS predicted grades form Who to complete? Please complete: Staff initial StudentMy overall AS result in this subject was: N/A Student (If necessary) The grades I achieved in different modules were: N/A Student My concrete strategy for improving this grade this year is: N/A Tutor Based on the evidence above, I believe it is appropriate for this student to discuss the possibility of changing the initial predicted grade with their subject teacher. Subject teacher I have read the paragraph at the top of this form, and understand that this grade will be for the entire A2 Level, and not only for my module. Subject teacher Based on all the evidence above, do you truly believe this student has the capacity to achieve a higher grade than initially predicted? YES / NO Subject teacher If you have answered ‘YES’, please indicate the predicted grade you will support: SGR / TOM / TRA / LCH I have reviewed all of the information, and am happy to approve a change to the predicted grade on the spreadsheet in the Achievement Director office (and initial it!) Predicted grades form part of a student’s UCAS application, forming part of the evidence that a university will use to decide whether or not a student is offered a place. These grades must be a realistic reflection of what you believe a student truly has the potential to achieve overall in their A2 result (taking account AS Level work, results and A2 work and results). If predicted too low, this will put the student at a disadvantage in their applications, but if predicted too high, runs the risk of students being rejected in the summer when they do not achieve this grade. These grades, therefore, should be as aspirational as possible but also realistic, taking account of all factors – AS work, AS external results, A2 work, A2 internal results.

4. UCAS References and TCAS 1. What is TCAS 2. How does it work

school.co.uk Students: 1.Link to their mentor 2.Select universities and courses 3.Request subject references from teachers (which they can see) 4.Write personal statements on here (which the mentor can edit/make suggestions) Mentors: 1. Collate subject references once received to write UCAS References for tutees

Summary Long process that will take until Christmas. Now: Students: 1.Decide if university is an option 2.Research and select up to 5 courses 3.Log on to TCAS and request subject references 4.Write as much of their personal statement as possible Staff: 1.Writing subject references for mentors to collate in Autumn Term.