Vocational Courses London

Vocational courses — particularly the best ones — usually involve some kind of link with the relevant industry. Sometimes they’re even ‘sandwich courses’ — which means you spend some time actually working for a company (and, yes, you do get paid). There are thick sandwiches and thin sandwiches, depending on the amount of time you spend working.

City and Islington College
020 7700 9333
The Angel
London
Hampstead Fine Arts College
020 7586 0312
24 Lambolle Place
London
University College School
020 7435 2215
Frognal
London
Newham College of Further Education
020 8257 4000
East Ham Campus
London
Eltham Hill Technology College for Girls
020 8859 2843
Eltham Hill
London
Davies Laing and Dick College
020 7935 8411
100 Marylebone Lane
London
City of Westminster College
020 7723 8826
Paddington Basin Campus
London
Quest Business Training
020 7373 3852
4 Wetherby Gardens
London
Eltham Green Specialist Sports College
020 8859 0133
1 Middle Park Avenue
London
Bromley College of Further and Higher Education
020 8295 7000
Rookery Lane
Bromley
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What Do You Want from University?

Ultimately, your choice of course depends on what you want from your university. Here’s a quick guide

You want to get a good job: Try to be specific about what kind of good job you want. Then do a course that’s, at best, a direct qualification, or at least, vaguely appropriate.

You might want to consider ‘vocational’ courses. These are any courses designed to teach you a particular career — although not only do they not necessarily guarantee you a job, they may not even help you get one. For more information about employment rates, click here..

Vocational courses — particularly the best ones — usually involve some kind of link with the relevant industry. Sometimes they’re even ‘sandwich courses’ — which means you spend some time actually working for a company (and, yes, you do get paid). There are thick sandwiches and thin sandwiches, depending on the amount of time you spend working. (There are probably club sandwich courses somewhere too, but Push suspects they’re part of a catering degree.)

Some universities, particularly the ones that used to be polytechnics, specialise in vocational courses. Many of them have excellent relations with businesses and employers and their graduates get jobs easily. Others don’t .

Sometimes, if you want to get a good job, it doesn’t matter what course you do, so long as you’re at a university with a good reputation.

You want to fill time, improve your CV, and keep your options open: Just study whatever shakes your tree. You’ll get better grades and enjoy it more.

You want to study for the sheer thrill of academic endeavour: Again, follow your fancy. You’re clearly already committed (or perhaps should have already been committed to an asylum).

You want to have a good time: There’s no such thing as a ‘doss’ course at university. If you want to do well, you pretty much have to put in the hours whatever the subject.

Having said that, there are some subjects where the course is rigidly structured — lectures and the like from nine to five, plus lots of work at weekends — and there are others where you get to manage your own time a bit more. Traditionally, it’s the sciences where your daily schedule is wall-to-wall, and it’s arts students who earn the reputation for lying in bed all day. Many arts students, however, work just as hard — it’s simply that they have huge reading lists and are often left to get on with it.

To have a good time, the same rule always applies: pick a course you’re going to enjoy, then grab the other opportunities that student life chucks at you.

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