kylef wrote:
Interesting. I only had the choice of English Literature and haven't heard of English Language still being taught at colleges. (apart from Use of English classes of course)
English Language is more of a science; studying linguistics, grammar and syntactic structures; phonics, phonems, speech etymology... things like that. English Literature is an art, leaning more towards the prose/poetry/drama tripartite structure that most courses adopt. After doing Language and Literature at A-Level I can safely say that Language is the boring 'soft' subject and Literature is the interesting and mind-opening one
. I may be a little bias though.
Mek wrote:
And if by College you meant Uni, and you only said College because you're talking like a fucking yank for some reason, then fuck right off and fail your Personal Statement.
Most of the old Universities are collegiate, i.e. consisting of many smaller colleges and administrations. I'm an undergraduate of a college, that is part of a University. Small technicality but it's definitely not a "Yank" habit... we invented the system
.
@ Kptk: Do your own, dammit
I very much doubt a group of strangers over the Internet can better instruct you in forming your
own personal statement. Besides, if it's just for an A-Level college then what's the big deal? Tell them you got 4 C's* at GCSE and get on the course.
*Comment applies to FE colleges, not your own GCSE results