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Are These A Levels Okay For Law

So I want to take law but which A level subject should I take?

Honestly I think you can study pretty much anything at A Level, they say not to bother with a Law A Level and I didn't (I studied Economics, English Language and Psychology) and I don't think it was a disadvantage.The only recommendation I would give is to choose at least one that is focussed on writing, analysing and remembering. Economics and English helped with my writing and analytical skills which gave me a serious advantage in Law. Psychology improved my memory skills and meant I was pretty good at revising and memorising case names, facts, verdicts, etc. Which again was invaluable in Law.I feel that the main skills you need to succeed in Law are writing, analysing and memorising. Writing this answer has just made me realise I, completely incidentally, studied 3 A Levels which gave me plenty of practise in these three areas. That was lucky huh?It is important to study what you want though. Do what you have a passion for, because even if you choose the most Law related A Levels, if you don't enjoy it you likely won't do well, which means you might not get in to uni to study Law anyway.So do what you want, in 2 years you may decide you don't want to study Law at uni anyway. Don't tie yourself down too early.Good luck

What should a Pakistani A-level student study at undergrad for law school in the US?

Make sure your English reading and reading comprehension abilities and speed are as high as possible. Be able to speak and write very well in English. If you are asking about courses to take, take courses in the “liberal arts" that are taught in English. If you cannot take courses in English, then consider taking online courses in English. Finally, I recommend that you begin reading good non-fiction books written in English by American writers. These can even be law books used by law students in the U.S. that you can purchase online.

What is law a level like and is it useless?

I have known a few people who studies A-Level law and then went on to study law at university. All of them have told me it was not relevant to their studying law. At least from what I understand universities do not particularly care for law at A-Level they would prefer to see more academic course work like: English, Maths, Natural Sciences (biology, chemistry, and physics), Literature, and strong computer skills.

How to become an airline pilot after picking my A levels?

While you can succeed as a pilot without going to university, you will cut your chances of getting hired by 75% if you don't. The alternative is to gain years and years of extra flight experience in lesser jobs. I also recommend from personal experience that you take a degree in a field other than aviation (unless it is engineering) that you might enjoy and will employ you if an aviation career goes badly (as they sometimes do for lots of reasons).

The nine theoretical knowledge subject areas that must be studied to pass the written tests for all levels of piloting (PPL through ATPL) include:

Air Law
Navigation
Aircraft General Knowledge
Operational Procedures
Flight Performance and Planning
Principles of Flight
Human Performance and Limitations
Communications
Meteorology

This will help you decide what courses to take to better prepare you. Also read this: http://www.balpa.org.uk/intranet/How-to-bec/How%20to%20become%20a%20pilot%20quark.pdf

and this:

http://www.caa.co.uk/docs/175/Section%20D%20-%20COMMERCIAL%20PILOT%20LICENCE.pdf

What is the difference between A Level Philosophy and A Level Religious Studies?

I study both at college as well as law and psychology. However, I must say that both philosophy and religious studies are really interesting. Both subjects do cross with each other at some points, for example, you will learn about the same scholars in each subject (Kant, Mill, Singer etc) but different things about them, so it can help you just that little bit more. However in religious studies you study things like the design argument, miracles, evil & suffering and utillitarianism etc, whereas in philosophy you study things like why we should be goverened, why we value art, what and how we get knowledge, free will & determinism etc. Philosophy in my opinion is a little more difficult to grasp, especially the bits about a priori/ a posterori knowledge. Hope this helps! :)

If you need to know anything else give me an email - carmenbarlow@hotmail.com

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