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anyone who wants to work in the future needs to be relentlessly professional ... that was my point and it applies to all of us who want to work and want to be able to support ourselves
as for your subjects ... you can take any subjects really because at a business school for your undergraduate degree you will typically study typical courses for business students, depending upon which university you will apply to.. to understand the relationship between the subjects you study at the A-levels and the courses you study at the undergraduate level read my previous posts .... for you i would suggest Accounts, Economics, Business Studies and Math ... A-levels Psychology is not considered a very credible subject by good universities ... the subject selection becomes very particular for students who want to apply for highly technical degrees for example Actuarial Sciences, Financial Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Software Engineering, Management Sciences (also called Operations Research), Engineering's other areas such as Mechatronics, Aeronautical,etc, Mathematics, Bio-sciences, and other similar fields ... but business students have a leeway with subject selection for their A-levels since business students no matter which type of organization they will work for, they typically study a wide range of subjects early on in order to figure out what they want to do with their careers but even so this approach does not really help business students understand the of the workplace and they end up making wrong career choices pretty often... so internships and personality assessment tests (MBTI, Big 5 Personality Traits Test) are the two best ways to figure out your career direction
business students typically end up in the following areas within organizations
Marketing
HR
Finance/Accounts
Legal
IT
Operations/Supply Chain
as for your subjects ... you can take any subjects really because at a business school for your undergraduate degree you will typically study typical courses for business students, depending upon which university you will apply to.. to understand the relationship between the subjects you study at the A-levels and the courses you study at the undergraduate level read my previous posts .... for you i would suggest Accounts, Economics, Business Studies and Math ... A-levels Psychology is not considered a very credible subject by good universities ... the subject selection becomes very particular for students who want to apply for highly technical degrees for example Actuarial Sciences, Financial Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Software Engineering, Management Sciences (also called Operations Research), Engineering's other areas such as Mechatronics, Aeronautical,etc, Mathematics, Bio-sciences, and other similar fields ... but business students have a leeway with subject selection for their A-levels since business students no matter which type of organization they will work for, they typically study a wide range of subjects early on in order to figure out what they want to do with their careers but even so this approach does not really help business students understand the of the workplace and they end up making wrong career choices pretty often... so internships and personality assessment tests (MBTI, Big 5 Personality Traits Test) are the two best ways to figure out your career direction
business students typically end up in the following areas within organizations
Marketing
HR
Finance/Accounts
Legal
IT
Operations/Supply Chain