Showing posts with label Degree. Show all posts

My Tictail Shop

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Hey everyone!

I hope you're all having a great Wednesday, today I have just popped in quickly to let you know about my Tictail shop!

By now you'll probably be very aware that I am starting my Masters Degree this September, and what with fees and books the whole thing is mighty expensive. To help with the cost I have set up my own little Tictail shop!



Please pop by, have a look and see if anything takes your fancy! And all the proceeds of this sale go towards the wonderful MA :)


Thanks for stopping by!



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Masters Degree: Series Introduction

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Happy Wednesday everyone!

I just wanted to pop in and let you know about a new series that I will be posting in here on Love, Amybecca...x My Masters Series!

You may (or may not) know that I am about to embark on my Masters Degree. I graduated from University after studying my Bachelors Degree (in History) in 2006, and I have decided in recent months to go on to my Masters Degree (also in History).

My plan throughout my degree is to continue working, so my aim for this series is to follow me from now (including a back post or two about the application process) as I am starting my pre-course reading & study, all the way through my degree right up until graduation.

My first post will go up in around a week and from then on I aim to do one blog post per month, and I will give you hints and tips throughout as well as answering questions and charting my experience of doing my MA as a mature student.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please leave me a comment, or tweet me (loveamybecca) and I will try and address these as I go along.

Speak to you all soon!



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A little MA update!

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Hey guys,

Sorry for the lack of posts recently, its been a bit of a busy time, but I am back and I shall try and update here a bit more frequently.

Today's post is all about my MA. You may or may not have read my previous post following my decision to do my MA: http://www.loveamybecca.co.uk/2013/02/ma-me.html

Once I had my initial acceptance I felt pleased that I had secured my place, however I still had to send off my degree classification, my transcripts and official application. I knew I had everything that was required for acceptance on the course, but it was still a nerve-wracking time (especially because the form was due to be back on the day I received it through the post - Thanks Royal Mail).

On the 21st of March I received my final confirmation that I had been accepted onto the Masters Degree, all I needed to do was accept and pay my fee's for the first part.

(The degree comes in two parts through the OU - the first part (which is worth the most credit) will be the taught, modular part of the degree. The second part will be the dissertation - which I don't need to think about yet).

So, I am registered, paid up and ready to start on the 28th September, and at the moment I am just doing some pre-course reading.

I will be doing a series, later in the summer, about preparing for the MA through to doing it, and any advice and tips I pick up along the way.

Speak soon guys, Happy Tuesday!

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MA & Me

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If you follow me on Twitter, you may have already caught wind of this...

I have signed myself up to do my Masters Degree! Eeeek!

It's been a long time since I graduated from university, 2006 to be precise, and it was even on my mind back then, I just wasn't entirely sure if it was what I wanted to do. Fast forward seven years, a few jobs and I finally seem to have figured it out and made up my mind.

I ummed and ahhed initially over what I wanted to do my Masters Degree in, my Bachelor's degree was in History and I knew I wanted to do something related to that. I toyed with Archive and Record keeping, Archaeology and History. After thinking long and hard (and a lot of research) I ruled out Archaeology and was left with a toss up between Archive & Record keeping and History. Both would use my degree, one was a specialty and the other wasn't.

I investigated further; I had an idea of a few careers that I was interested in (Research, Museum Curatorship and Heritage) and worked backwards from there to find out what qualifications I would need for my chosen path. In my mind, at this stage, I had already ruled out Archive & Record keeping, I just needed to know whether the choice of a Masters in History was the right one.

Like I said, I graduated from my Bachelors degree in 2006, these final stages of thought were taking place at the latter end of 2012, so it had taken me a while to get myself to the point where I was ready to make a final decision.

The real decision came during a conversation with my other half. We discussed what I really wanted to do career-wise, and my answer was 'Research'. I've always loved the element of research that came alongside my History degree and have always wished I could take it to a higher level, but its not the easiest of routes to follow, but that doesn't mean it can't be done. We talked it through and I went away thinking even more intensely about my next step.

When it came to the crunch I knew what I wanted to do, a lot of it was down to what I already knew I wanted to do, the other was my other half just asking a few questions which really made me think about it. So I signed up for my Masters Degree in History, starting in September 2013.

The plan I have at the moment is very loose, and that's kind of the way I like it, I don't want or need to put any pressure on the situation, I just want to try and do the very best I can. I start the Masters, like I said, in September this year with the Open University with the aim of completing it in two years (which brings me to the year I turn 30). Then, my loosely planned route has two options. If I am happy where I am I intend to investigate jobs in Museum Curatorship, possibly something to do with researching and maintaining collections. My other option is look for funding for a PhD in History and complete that over a few years, with the aim of going into Research/Education (like a University lecturer etc). At the moment I am not putting pressure on myself, but I do love the idea of being able to complete the PhD. What an achievement that would be!

The process of deciding wasn't easy but was at the same time. I think all along I probably knew what it was I wanted to do, I just needed to be sure about it in my mind. I am so happy with the decision I have made, and although for now it will take a while to get to where I am headed, that's fine with me. I have a supportive man, a supportive family and with that in mind, I already feel like I can do anything I set my mind to.

I'd love to hear from you if you've done your Masters Degree, are thinking about it or just if you have any questions!

Happy Wednesday Folks!

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Sometimes your best friend WILL stab you in the back

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I learnt this the hard way. I was 21 when this lesson came upon me, and probably for the rest of time I will miss my ex-best friend.

We were finishing the first semester of our final year of university when she betrayed me.

I’ll start from the beginning…

I met her when I was just two years old, so young in fact I don’t actually recall really meeting her, she was just always there. We lived on the same street, we went to the same nursery school, the same infants, juniors, seniors and then the same university. We studied for the same degree and lived in the same house. We joked that we would be in the same nursing home together one day.

We even used to discuss how never once in the 19 years of friendship had we ever had a single fight.
Doing the same course meant that when it came to coursework we would always help the other one out by proof reading for the other. In this case we had two essays due at the same time, one in English History and one in German History. I decided to start well in advance and decided to do the German History essay first, being that it was my strongest subject and I wanted to get a rough draft in by the date given by our tutor. I wanted to really excel in this essay, get an amazing grade which would help me out with my final grade. I got my essay done really early in the semester, I handed in my rough draft in plenty of time and then made the necessary adjustments. I then submitted it about 2 weeks early, just as to get it out of the way. I submitted it before my best friend had even started hers. She started the English History one first.
She proof read mine before I handed it in and I had a copy in my room once it had been submitted, which I let her look over to see how I had structured things. I had no reason to worry, she was my best friend, and this was something we had done millions of times before (that being I let her look over my work, and me looking over hers).

Both my essays had been handed in by the time she started hers, like I said, I started mine early. When I was reading through her German History essay I noticed how like mine it sounded. Alarm bells should have gone off then and I should have done something about it. But I didn’t. I let it go, she handed hers in and then we all went home for Christmas break.

When we returned to university I had all but forgotten it, other things got in the way (we found out our landlord had made off with all our rent and had not been paying the mortgage on our house, meaning it was now being repossessed, and we were being evicted. We had to find somewhere to live by the time we were going back in January). Our first lecture back in German History and we received our essays back. I was excited because I knew that I had put so much effort into it, and I was really sure I would get a good grade. When I received my essay back I saw the grade ‘E’ and a note saying ‘This essay shows evidence of collusion with ***** *****. Please see me’.

I knew it. I knew when I proof read it. I looked up the row of our friends to where she was sitting, holding the same essay as I submitted, with the same comments on the front. She had the look of on her face of guilt, and I knew that because I had known her for so long, I really could read her like a book. I whispered to my friend, who I had told back around the hand-in date that I suspected this, so she wasn’t surprised. I rang my mum, who also knew, and she was fuming.

We had to go for a meeting with my tutor, and were to take our parents along. I went in first, and then her. I was told that either we would both take the penalty (collusion) or one of us would (plagiarism). I wasn’t worried, I had plenty on my side. The fact that the tutor had seen my submitted rough draft, and I had submitted it early. Emails from my so called best friend to another friend around 3 weeks after I submitted it stating that she hadn’t started it yet, MSN Messenger conversations in the same ilk, and the dates logged on my Microsoft word from the start of the document up until the last save. Every piece of evidence I had I printed off and presented it to them. My tutor remained frosty, but the other lady in there said it was clear I had done nothing wrong.

Now I must note at this point that for some reason that tutor didn’t like me. That’s not an excuse here, she just didn’t. I am not sure what I had done prior to this but she was always frosty with me, and didn’t really care for what I had to say. This was mighty clear some months later when she was my dissertation tutor. When I received that back her first mark had been 59%, the second marker gave me 79% and they had to agree somewhere inbetween. Twenty marks different.

Anyway, a few weeks passed and I received a letter thanking me and my parents for our attendance at the meeting, and that it was clear by my version of events and all the evidence I had presented that I had no case to answer and the case was closed. I was so happy, knowing I hadn’t done anything wrong and then it being proved was a really big thing.

I presumed that this meant my now ex best friend had taken the penalty. (I should probably add at this point that the low marks in the essay was due to the plagiarism/collusion issue, and I was told that a real mark would be reinstated should I be found innocent).

Because our friendship group was so interwined by this point it was easy to find out what she had been told after the meeting. I couldn’t find out exactly, but a friend said all she said was that she was cleared too. And this must have been the case because she graduated, and if she had been found guilty she would have been one module down.

My mark was never reinstated, and therefore she graduated on my merit, and because my grade was never reinstated I drop a class boundary.

I used to be angry, I’m not anymore. I lost one of the greatest people in my life and for that I am sad, and probably always will miss her. However, I don’t think I could ever trust her or forgive her for what she did anyway. If she had come to me and admitted it and apologised it would have been ok. But she didn’t. Never once has she admitted it, and never once did she say sorry.

Sometimes the people you meet at uni become your lifelong friends but you can also loose lifelong friends there too.

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