Your A-Level choices shape the university courses and careers open to you. It's a big decision — but a clear method makes it far less daunting.
Start with where you might be going
Some paths have firm requirements: medicine wants Biology and Chemistry; engineering wants Maths and Physics; law and economics often reward strong essay subjects. If a career interests you, check its typical entry subjects first, then plan backwards.
Play to genuine strengths
A-Levels are deeper and faster than O-Levels. Subjects you found solid at O-Level — not just enjoyable, but where you scored well — are usually safer bets than a subject you struggled with but feel you 'should' take.
Mind the combinations
Some subjects reinforce each other: Maths supports Physics, Chemistry and Economics; Literature sharpens History and Religious Studies. A coherent combination is often stronger than three unrelated subjects.
Leave room for interest
You'll study these for two years. Real interest sustains effort when it gets hard. A subject you're curious about will usually beat one you only picked for prestige.
Get a second opinion
Talk to teachers who know your work, and to someone in a field you're considering. On Braabby, a quick session with a subject teacher can tell you what the A-Level really demands before you commit.
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