Question:
Oxbridge Extracurriculars?
Victoria
2009-05-27 16:26:21 UTC
Hi,
I am going to be applying to Oxford University in September and wanted to know what sorts of extracurriculars I can do in order to enhance my personal statement. I want to do Classics with Oriental Studies as my degree and the stuff I already do are: I am the Classics Representative for the school, I teach Greek mythology to primary school kids, I have a part time job, I do volunteer work, I am going to a Classics summer school this summer, I am doing work experience at a museum in the egyptology section, I am a member of the national classics association, I am going to do some work experience in Germany this summer and I've been to places like the British Museum, Rome etc. I know that Oxbridge's main concern is with the grades but I think I'm fine on that aspect, it's just the less academic side to my application form I'm attempting to improve, so if you have any ideas on what I can do then please help.
Thanks for listening to my question even though it seems rather tedious! Much appreciated : ) x
Four answers:
thepawnbrokerroared
2009-05-28 02:21:52 UTC
They don't want you to do sports just for the sake of your Oxbridge application! The most important thing is that you persuade them that you are the sort of person they want to teach. You achieve that by getting top grades and by demonstrating a genuine enthusiasm for your subject, which you seem to be showing through your choice of activities.
tea
2009-05-27 17:28:51 UTC
From what you have listed it seems as though all of your extracurricular activities are focused towards the subject that you want to study (and quite rightly actually!) However, it might be useful to be slightly diverse. This is quite a large commitment, but you could try learning a musical instrument? However, i understand that your application has to be in quite soon, so it would be quite a challenge!



You could perhaps instigate your own group to do with classics studies at your school, as that would show good leadership skills as well?



Hope this helps, and jolly good luck with your application!
Stacy
2009-05-27 16:49:50 UTC
Well, if you don't know too much about sports, then do something basic. Basketball is pretty easy to learn, and if you don't really have that many skills to do a sport like that, you could always do track, which is still a sport and doesn't require too many skills, unless you're a really slow runner, in which case, I'd do basketball or karate.
anonymous
2016-10-26 14:15:12 UTC
As someone who lives very close to Oxford and hasn't ever been everywhere close to to having the tutorial skill to get right into a school my in straight forward words statement is what you're saying about operating in Germany sounds staggering, yet you also prefer to rigidity that you've learnt to talk in German, and perchance also write in Oriental languages spoken in parts you artwork in. To me to mirror a actual skill to be good at classics, you want to bare an skill to both learn and effectively locate procedures to talk AND write cutting-edge languages as a prelude to historic languages like Latin and historic Greek maximum human beings froom the united kingdom and u . s . as we talk have a tendency to be disrespected in another u . s ., because they look too lazy and disinterested to annoy to target to earnings each and every individual else's language except their own. in case you mirror that similar approach it can no longer do your possibilities good?


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