Hey ed, I totally appreciate your giving out of advice, and a lot of it makes sense. I just need to pick you up/comment on a couple of things though:
I got Ds and Es in my AS levels first time around and when my parents found out they said they refused to pay for me to live at home anymore and that they certainly weren't paying my train fare each day for me to go to my high school's sixth form. A few weeks later I convinced them to let me to go to a different place, a college - not a sixth form where I studied two subjects the same and 2 different. This meant that the second time around I did a lot better, I got AAAB in my first year of redoing my AS and AAA in the second year and I did Electronics, Maths and Geography (Eng Lit was the AS I dropped cause there's only so many times you can take a bunch of ugly girls in one room gawping at you).
That's not great parental support there, I have to say. It's like punishing a student for not being able. I know a few people who HAVE gone to college and got better grades, but I believe this is for the reasons I'll talk about below. Oh yeah FUCK YOU for the English Literature comments hehe. Nowadays we have a few more guys taking the subject! I even had a COMMUNIST with a BERET in one lesson. I bet you don't get that in physics, EH?!?!
If you are serious about wanting to do something specific at uni, maybe you could do the same thing. I think college is free in the UK until you are 25, one thing to worry about is that the longer you leave it before going to university the more chance that the tories will get in and that will most likely bring ball-breaking fees. You never know what they are going to be like the next year. My sister comes from the same household and she had the same financial check that student loans give you as I did and she gets a grand more than me because she is from a different yeargroup and they get more. Your loan-based fortune is pretty arbitrary is what I am trying to say.
1) While college DOES sometimes improve one's grades, this simply isn't because colleges are 'better'. In fact, overall, colleges get a lot WORSE results from students. The main bonuses about colleges are that you're treated more like an adult, call your teachers by their first names, and it's a relaxed atmosphere that's conducive to independent learning. This DOES benefit some students and rapidly improve their grades, but these tend to be slightly older students, like yourself as stated earlier. Sometimes people who've restarted their AS-levels. A new setting, alongside the realisation that you need to work harder, CAN do wonders, but college isn't the miracle cure it appears to many people. It IS a change though, and it can be a good change at that. It totally depends on the kind of learner you are.
2) College IS indeed free until you're 25, as long as you don't have any higher qualifications than what you plan to study. If you're over 25 and unemployed, it is also free or at a massively reduced fee. My partner is going back to college to do a BTEC Level 3 (A-level equivalent) in Music Tech. As he's 25, and already has a BA in Music, we have to pay nearly two grand! If he didn't have that degree we'd be SITTING PRETTY!
3) Do not worry about 'BALL BREAKING FEES'. I left university with £48,000 of debt. However, the system works now as more of a GRADUATE TAX than a LOAN. This means you don't pay anything until you earn over £16k, and when you do you pay a minimal amount. I earn a fair bit of cash nowadays, but still only pay like £40 a month to the student loan company. Not the end of the world!
You have to want to succeed to get the high grades otherwise, with Ds and Es you are pretty much treading water before heading into the world of work. Any worthy university these days has high entry requirements of B or above.
This is the sentence that really makes me disagree with you dude. 'Worthy' university! ALL universities are worthy and all can produce the qualifications necessary to do what you want with your life. Don't do down people's achievements because they can only achieve Ds and Es. I have a colleague that got a couple of Ds and a B at A-level, who now teaches alongside me and is a FANTASTIC teacher. They ended up getting a nice class of degree from a university and are now pretty set up. Don't listen to the bullshit about 'WORTHINESS OF UNIVERSITY'. If it isn't one of the top twenty, which require AAB, it really doesn't matter whether the requirements are BBB are DDD. Employers don't give a shit anyway.
This is just some advice/experience from someone who got the same grades when I was back then. You do get an easy time doing you A levels compared to later study and they are easy if you can stay motivated and you know what you want to do. Not knowing what you want to do in life was the main source of apathy and de-motivation for me.
Total agreement with this paragraph. Keep motivated!
ed: Don't see any of this as an attack - I totally agree with your sentiment. Just wanted to give a POSTIVE INSIDER'S VIEW of the situation!