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Question: What A-levels did you do and what did you study at university?
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Lewis Griffin answered on 31 Dec 2019:
Maths, Further Maths & Physics A-Levels, then Maths & Philosophy at University.
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Andrew Harrison answered on 1 Jan 2020:
Maths, Further Maths, Physics and Chemistry A-levels then Pure Mathematics at University. One course I didn’t understand and failed in my degree was mathematical optimisation, which is the subject I went on to study in my PhD and have spent the last 28 years applying.
So don’t give up if you don’t understand something the first time.
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Gary Munnelly answered on 1 Jan 2020:
I didn’t actually do A-levels because I’m from Ireland. We do the Leaving Cert out here.
I did Biology, Physics, Construction Studies, History, and a language (Spanish).
In college I did a degree in Engineering, then later I specialized in Computer Engineering.
This year I finished my PhD in Computer Science.
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James Bentham answered on 2 Jan 2020:
Geography, Physics and Maths, and AS level Geology. I then studied civil engineering at university, so I’ve had a slightly complicated route to get to statistics
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Giuseppe Cotugno answered on 2 Jan 2020:
I studied in Italy, we don’t have a concept of A-levels there but if you wish to become a research engineer, I suggest you to take math and physics plus another scientific subject like informatics.
I studied engineering at university, as such I studied a lot of mathematics, physics (classical mechanics and electromagnetism) which are common subjects for every engineering student. As my bachelor degree was on digital systems engineering, I studied also algorithms, digital electronics, databases and programming. My masters degree was on Artificial Intelligence, so I studied machine learning and logic (expert systems).
If you get a masters degree on a new topic (like AI) you can apply for a job as research engineer, however I would strongly suggest you to consider getting a PhD as well (mine was in Robotics) as this helps negotiating better conditions.
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Rob Stanley answered on 2 Jan 2020: last edited 2 Jan 2020 12:41 pm
I did A-levels in Maths, Physics, and Art – I think Art was the hardest, due to the amount of time it took.
I studied straight Mathematics at university for my first degree. Then I did a PhD studying mathematics and biochemistry.
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Dominique Sleet answered on 3 Jan 2020:
I studied Maths, Biology, French and Psychology at A Level and then went on to study Natural Sciences at University. Natural Sciences can cover a huge range of topics but I focused on maths, biology and science communication.
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Diana Kornbrot answered on 3 Jan 2020:
Pbhysics, maths, applied maths, chemistry A level
Physics B. sc.
Mathematical Psychology Ph.dGood grounding in mathshas been inspiration and aid alll my life
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Fiona Macfarlane answered on 3 Jan 2020: last edited 3 Jan 2020 4:36 pm
I am Scottish, so we don’t have A levels, but I did Maths, English, Music, Biology and Chemistry at a similar level. At University I started studying Biochemistry, but switched to Mathematical Biology in my 1st year, which was split between Maths and Biology classes.
I then did my PhD in Mathematical Biology too
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Maja Popovic answered on 6 Jan 2020:
We don’t have A-levels in Serbia where I went to school and studied, but I went to mathematical high school where in the last two years maths was separated into Calculus (Mathematical Analysis), Geometry, Trigonometry, Probability and Statistics, Algebra.
Then I did bachelor and master in Electrical Engineering (sub-field: telecommunications), and after that PhD in Computer Science (sub-field: natural language processing). -
Sophie Carr answered on 7 Jan 2020:
Maths, Physics, Chemstry and General Studies. Then I studied Aeronautical Engineering with French (it’s not combined honours, just an engineering degree where some of the lectures are in French and you have a year in industry in France, and you might have spotted I didn’t study A Level French) which was followed by an MSc in Applied Maths and Fluid Mechanics before finishing off with a PhD in Bayesian Networks.
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