My school had a program different from GCSE for our last 2 years of high school, but you could choose your subjects in a similar way to GCSE. I decided to focus more on science (chemistry and biology, but not physics) because I love to know how the world works from cellular and molecular points of view. If you love these kinds of questions and are fascinated by the natural world, I think the best advice is to follow that curiosity!
I don’t think we had any other choice in my school; we all did dual science GCSE. I enjoyed the coursework experiments the most. It’s good to study a broad range of subjects while you can.
I was lucky to be at a school with a strong, if slightly eccentric, science department. My school didn’t do combined science, but offered separate Biology, Chemistry and Physics, one of which we had to do so that we kept a broad range of subjects (one social science and one language were also compulsary, along with English and Maths). I chose to take the other two as free choices simply because I enjoyed them and didn’t, at the time, know which I liked best. I loved finding out about the world, understanding it better – it’s full of such beauty and wonder.
Comments
Andrew M commented on :
I was lucky to be at a school with a strong, if slightly eccentric, science department. My school didn’t do combined science, but offered separate Biology, Chemistry and Physics, one of which we had to do so that we kept a broad range of subjects (one social science and one language were also compulsary, along with English and Maths). I chose to take the other two as free choices simply because I enjoyed them and didn’t, at the time, know which I liked best. I loved finding out about the world, understanding it better – it’s full of such beauty and wonder.