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I am currently doing a BA hons in English and History, what would I need to do next?

2006-08-11 22:02:01 · 7 answers · asked by TB 5 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

7 answers

Having a degree is one thing, but turning it into a (preferably good) job or even career is quite another. There are people with great academic honours who are unemployed or drive a taxi, while universities and colleges are full of professors and lecturers with mediocre academic achievements.

Most important is to know what you want. Studying and getting a degree does not decide that. You do. And your degree(s) will be helpful to get there.
Once you have decided what you want to do and where you want to go, then plan your moves carefully. Contact suitable people and make enquiries, if possible attend academic conferences on your subject(s) and go to ex-currirular lectures. Try to write some essays or articles that will show your interest and expertise, and try to get them published (even without payment). And then just stay focused on your target, be wise and move in small steps forward. It worked for me, so I hope it will work for you, too.
Good Luck!

2006-08-12 02:16:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Generally, if you want to become a university lecturer you need a PhD and some postdoctoral experience, as well as a handful of publications in your chosen specialisation.

However some universities appoint people having a first degree (e.g. BA (Hons) English & History) as their highest academic qualification. Although in these cases the person is usually highly experienced and has already made important contributions outside the academic community (e.g. the industrial community for science and engineering).

Remember also that lecturers are not highly paid in the UK.

2006-08-11 22:08:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

It really depends on the level and subject. Technically, you can become an FE lecturer with no formal qualifications, just established knowledge of the subject area. In practise, most college faculties prefer a good degree and some teaching qualification, FAETC or PGCE.
I have been lecturing in IT for 5 years now, I have a degree, PGCE, several certificates of professional development, and I've almost finished my Masters. I intend to go on and take a Doctorate in Education.
The pay is crap, but occasionally the work brings its rewards.

2006-08-11 23:29:56 · answer #3 · answered by Avondrow 7 · 0 1

no longer "organic", no. that should point that absolutely everyone who has a level could be a caught-up snob. people who "grow to be" snobs have been snobs until eventually now. The degree only convinces them that they now have the "real" to be overtly caught-up and snobbish. It additionally famous that they've a stonking great inferiority complicated and ought to wave their degree/skills in human beings's faces to sense "greater desirable" than human beings. in spite of the incontrovertible fact that, the wisest of all real scholars are conscious that there is often greater to examine, and are humbled via ways little they actually understand. "The greater you comprehend, the greater you comprehend you do no longer comprehend." people who boast or act caught-up by way of fact of one or 2 tiers are only attempting to shore up their undesirable self self assurance. that they had be the comparable way in the event that they drove a truck all day. some human beings only won't be ready to stand tall except they chop human beings's heads off.

2016-12-11 07:24:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A PGCE would let you be a lecturer in a sixth form college, or possibly some kinds of Uni.

2006-08-11 22:07:59 · answer #5 · answered by savs 6 · 0 1

if you get a good 2:1 or preferably a 1st, then you could apply for a Phd. Most uni lecturers get in that way.

2006-08-11 22:07:14 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

With a degree I thought you would be able to answer that yourself or find a suitable forum to ask....not the nuts here.

2006-08-11 22:05:01 · answer #7 · answered by your pete 4 · 1 0

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