The detective phenomenon originates from South Korea. Primary school pupils and university students are content about how they study and how much time they spend on studies – time that can often correspond to the waking hours of the day.
In Britain, where there is fierce competition for places at the country’s best universities with students from all over the world – and where study places may be reduced due to the universities’ poor finances, more popular for the genre.
“hard press”
According to Hossein Fateh, a dental student in Manchester, there is a need, especially among students who are going to apply to university, to get information about how the application process works and how best to stand up. them out in the competition.
– I myself felt strong pressure in primary school and if it wasn’t for the fact that my sister was already in university, I wouldn’t have known, he says.
High demands on the applications
The preparation for university studies in Great Britain looks different than in Sweden. To enter Hossein Fateh’s dental program, he, for example, deserves to know the profession even before the training begins, through practice.
– Some primary schools help with things like that, the school I went to didn’t have the opportunity to do that. The resources simply weren’t there. But I still managed to get in and now I’m telling other people how I got here, he says.
Davina Nalwadda is a law student in Birmingham and produces content on social media about her studies for a similar audience.
– I often get questions about how I went about getting here. I offer a platform for people who want to know what the possibilities are and how you can push yourself to reach your goals, she says.
2024-08-18 15:45:23
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