Tuesday 23 September 2008

Outstanding exam performances: 12 top-ten results

Twelve d'Overbroeck's College students achieved the remarkable feat of ranking within the top ten marks nationwide in this year's exams.

Particularly impressive is the fact that three d'Overbroeck's students ranked amongst the top ten for AS Mathematics, and two for AS Politics.

Many congratulations to all these students on their fantastic acheivement. The full list of top-ten achievers follows.
  • Piang Phanprasit
    Top 10 of 3380 in A2 Politics
  • Boris Yarutskyy, Anastasia Colesnicenco and Aziza Dossumova
    Top 10 of 549 in AS Russian
  • Song Wei, Val Saksornchai and Hanying Tang
    Top 10 of 33784 in AS Maths
  • Chantawit Tantasith and Duangporn Darongsuwan
    Top 10 of 9846 in AS Politics
  • Melvin John
    Top 10 of 19 in IGCSE German
  • Ke Xin Zhang
    Top 10 of 2250 in GCSE Chinese
  • Anna Sokolva
    Top 10 of 1922 in GCSE Russian

Thursday 4 September 2008

5 A's - and Japanese from scratch ...


Ali Mitchell left d'Overbroeck's this year, having gained five A's at A level – in Classical Greek, French, History, Japanese and Spanish. We caught up with Ali shortly after he received these results.

What are your plans for next year?
I'm planning to spend September to December in Paris – perfecting my French – and, with luck, December will be occupied with an Oxford interview (fingers crossed). I've been invited to spend some time in Australia in 2009, and I'd also like to go to Japan again, to put into practice what I've spent three years studying.

Tell us more about Japanese. How did you come to be learning it?
It all started with a dispute with a friend. We were watching a film, and I felt that the subtitles weren't accurate. My friend dismissively said, "Yeah, but what can you do about it? It's impossible for foreigners to learn Japanese".

... So I bought some CDs – and finding that I enjoyed it, sought out a real teacher. I eventually decided that I liked Japanese enough to do it to A-level, so I did GCSE in my own time allowing me to do the full As and A2 at d'Overbroeck's.

You studied an unusual selection of subjects at A level. Which did you enjoy most?
It's hard to say – I enjoyed all very much. If you twist my arm, I'll probably say Latin and Greek (although technically separate, they're really educational siamese twins). Setting aside the languages themselves, these two cultures are fascinating: they're simultaneously very different from and very similar to modern European cultures. What's more, without the Greeks and Romans, Europe – and the rest of the world that it influenced – would be unrecognisably different.