CELU7. Week 9. Reading

CELU7. Week 9. Reading

University

7 Qs

quiz-placeholder

Similar activities

B1 2A Grammar Past Simple & Past Continuous

B1 2A Grammar Past Simple & Past Continuous

University

12 Qs

so and such

so and such

12th Grade - Professional Development

12 Qs

Conjunctions & Transitions

Conjunctions & Transitions

12th Grade - University

10 Qs

Recount text

Recount text

12th Grade - University

10 Qs

PAST PERFECT and PAST PERFECT CONTINUOUS

PAST PERFECT and PAST PERFECT CONTINUOUS

University

10 Qs

Homophones

Homophones

KG - University

10 Qs

Past Simple, Past continuous, Past Perfect.

Past Simple, Past continuous, Past Perfect.

11th Grade - University

11 Qs

Have / Get something done

Have / Get something done

University

10 Qs

CELU7. Week 9. Reading

CELU7. Week 9. Reading

Assessment

Quiz

English

University

Medium

Created by

Valentina Gavranovic

Used 3+ times

FREE Resource

7 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: The author compares his behaviour to Justin Trudeau’s because he wanted to point out his

openness and benevolence

intentional authority

openness and authoritarianism

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: ‘It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them.’

more confident

not as frightened as I used to be

less close to them

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m consideringa. featured topics

b.

The First Things (a religious journal based in NY)

foot

The Financial Times

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: The author believes that they will be more honest in the future. (Day 4)

True

False

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: During the 7th day, the author ....

realised that his job was useless

doubted that all he had done in the offife would be destroyed

realised that the fixed hours made him bored

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: During the 9th day, the author ...

realised that more and more interns are taking long breaks

suspected that the solicitor was reporting on him

knew that the solicitor was reporting on him

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Day 4 – Taken to a local theatre for workshop on body language. Summary: manspreading really is the route to success! In addition to: direct eye contact; and firm handshakes. Boys school really worked wonders.

Spend the rest of the day performing my best Justin Trudeau impression, speaking deliberately and directly in an effort to project benign authority.

It’s early days with my fellow interns but I’m feeling less intimidated by them. In between discussing scraps of the FT, one asks me which other firms I’m considering. I name the other few that I applied to (which all rejected me at the online test stage). Got to wing it to win it. I’m sure this professional façade will fade soon enough, and we can all return to acting like confused, overwhelmed students. Because we all are.


Day 7 – We’ve had presentations from just about every department in the firm and now the timetable is looking empty. Just me and my solicitor in a shared office for the next few days.

Long stint in the office gets me restless, so I take a walk around the block a few times before returning to my desk. Continue work preparing notes for my solicitor’s report, but doubtful about how useful I am. Suspicion my work will be torched when I leave.

Day 9 – Workshop on interviews was cancelled and now I’m sitting in my office with my associate. Other interns are making habit of long ‘coffee breaks’ downstairs. Starting to join those. My guy doesn’t seem that bothered. He may be secretly reporting on me.

Day 11 – The partner in charge of recruitment walks into the boardroom where we’ve gathered for another talk in preparation for final day interviews. “At the end of the day, commercial law is the highly-paid application of common sense,” he tells us. We laugh, but most of us are absolutely intent on proving it. He’s a robust handshake of a man, with hawk-eyes staring, Justin Trudeau-like, at each of us in turn.

Day 12 – Final day, the interview. One hour written exercise, then an interview with partners from the firm. Feeling pressed for time during the written trial but interview flew by like a good conversation.

Coach home to Edinburgh. Leaving London, the bus turns into the M1 and I’m informed that I’ve just entered ‘The North’, otherwise known as Watford.


So, I was still doubt-ridden about my future. Admiring myself in a crisp suit in the bathroom mirrors (which I may or may not have frequented too often) didn’t seem to help much either. Don’t be mistaken – I looked great. I just needed more time to see myself there.

I’ve delighted in the liberty of keeping my options open in life until now. My future, however, seemed a lot more real as I passed through those glass doors every morning into an office chair. Suddenly those stray thoughts scribbled on scrap pieces of paper, those ideas and intentions about where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do, had to become reality.

Cambridge offers us a highway. We can get anywhere we want at cruising speed. We can view from an elevated position the winding off-roads and turn-offs which others have taken. We can even turn onto them at the next junction, if we so choose.

I know others who’ve done so already. Take the lawyers and doctors, for example, who took their turns in sixth-form; the dreamers who sent themselves off packing to drama school or music conservatoire; and those who didn’t bother to take a road at all, choosing to go their own, meandering way, perhaps in a foreign country.


While our LinkedIn accounts may present a colourful itinerary from success to success, let’s just remind ourselves, now and again, that we’re not all powering along the highway of dreams. In fact, most of the time, we’re meandering on side-roads, doing roundabouts one time too many, and sometimes even taking wrong turns.

Perhaps, though, that’s better than cruising along toward a destination we haven’t yet fully considered. The lights of the City will continue to burn brightly, I’m sure of that. But it’s not the only destination on offer.

So spend some more time asking yourself that overwhelming question while you’re at Cambridge, because sometimes there isn’t the option to turn back.


Q: During the final day, the author

felt comfortable with both written exercise and the interviews

felt comfortable with both written exercise and the interviews

felt comfortable with the interview, but didn’t have enough time for the written exercise

felt comfortable with the interview, but didn’t feel relaxed during the written exercise due to the

set time