- #1
Kaldanis
- 106
- 0
Hi everyone. First I'd like to say how glad I am that I found this forum! There's a lot of useful information but I still can't get rid of some fears I have.
I'm in the UK. I left school at 16 after my GCSEs and went to college to study a higher computing course which I failed due to bad attendance (I was young, lazy, and found the course work too easy so I just stopped going. I turned up for all the major exams and still got the best grades in the class, but ultimately failed for not completing the coursework) I then got an okayish job as a network technician for a few years but after a while it just wasn't enough. I went back to college to continue my studies that I should have done years before and I completed my HND in networking technical support just last year. (The HND is half a degree) Now it's 1 year on and I just turned 23 years old, and I'm back in a similar networking job as before I got the HND. This career isn't enough for me any more so over the past 6 months I've really been thinking about what I love and interests me.
My whole life I've been obsessed with the universe and learning about how things are the way they are and what they're made of, etc. It's the only thing in life I can truly say that keeps me up at night thinking about it. I'd love to get a degree in physics and study astrophysics or even particle physics which I've more recently became interested in. I know everyone says that with hard work and dedication it's possible for anyone to get a degree, but the math side worries me. I've never struggled with math or anything, I just wasn't that interested in school. Plus I'm 23 now so it was a few years ago... I'm really not sure how much I remember or if I'd even cope in a physics degree. I only studied math and physics at GCSE level. My higher level qualifications are my HNC and HND in networking (which did contain some numeracy, but I'm not sure if that's the same thing) /endbio
So my questions are: do you think I will cope with only secondary school math and will I be able to catch up on it while doing the degree? Or would it be best if I took the next year to go back and do my highers in math and physics at college, then start the degree next year? Although I'd be 24 then, which is getting kinda old to start again... I know I can do this, I want it too badly to fail. I just don't want to be jumping in at the deep end and drowning. Are there any recommended books or things to bring my math up to the level needed to begin a degree in physics? Thank you for any help or advice anyone can give me :)
I'm in the UK. I left school at 16 after my GCSEs and went to college to study a higher computing course which I failed due to bad attendance (I was young, lazy, and found the course work too easy so I just stopped going. I turned up for all the major exams and still got the best grades in the class, but ultimately failed for not completing the coursework) I then got an okayish job as a network technician for a few years but after a while it just wasn't enough. I went back to college to continue my studies that I should have done years before and I completed my HND in networking technical support just last year. (The HND is half a degree) Now it's 1 year on and I just turned 23 years old, and I'm back in a similar networking job as before I got the HND. This career isn't enough for me any more so over the past 6 months I've really been thinking about what I love and interests me.
My whole life I've been obsessed with the universe and learning about how things are the way they are and what they're made of, etc. It's the only thing in life I can truly say that keeps me up at night thinking about it. I'd love to get a degree in physics and study astrophysics or even particle physics which I've more recently became interested in. I know everyone says that with hard work and dedication it's possible for anyone to get a degree, but the math side worries me. I've never struggled with math or anything, I just wasn't that interested in school. Plus I'm 23 now so it was a few years ago... I'm really not sure how much I remember or if I'd even cope in a physics degree. I only studied math and physics at GCSE level. My higher level qualifications are my HNC and HND in networking (which did contain some numeracy, but I'm not sure if that's the same thing) /endbio
So my questions are: do you think I will cope with only secondary school math and will I be able to catch up on it while doing the degree? Or would it be best if I took the next year to go back and do my highers in math and physics at college, then start the degree next year? Although I'd be 24 then, which is getting kinda old to start again... I know I can do this, I want it too badly to fail. I just don't want to be jumping in at the deep end and drowning. Are there any recommended books or things to bring my math up to the level needed to begin a degree in physics? Thank you for any help or advice anyone can give me :)