montage said:but have no time for "the boring bits".....
I can't help noticing that you've overlooked the time killing benefits of drinking beer and shagging birds as part of a well rounded university education there...
montage said:but have no time for "the boring bits".....

Flying_Monkey said:Right...
As probably the only person here who has taught university-level geography and who also did a history degree, I can probably give you better advice than most...
A simple point: what you get out of any degree you do will reflect the effort you put into it. You can probably be a complete waster and come out with a 3rd, but then you probably would be better off not going to university if this is what you plan to do.
Geography courses generally come in 2 flavours: BA and BSc. The latter will tend to concentrate on physical geography and GIS (and will be more like environmental or earth sciences), whereas the former tend to be more human geography-based (and closer to sociology and politics). You can mix and match more in some universities than others, and there are many 'Geography and...' courses these days. You can probably specialise of continue to be a generalist as much as you wish, but remember that if you really want to specialise, this generally happens at graduate not undergraduate level. All undergraduate education is relatively 'general' (or wishy-washy, if you prefer...).
History degrees are massively varied. Modern History at the traditional universities tends to mean everything after the Romans left Britain, whereas in others it will mean the last couple of centuries or even post-WW2. Combined History and Politics degrees seem to be increasingly popular, and give you more options.
Look at what else each university offers: terms or years abroad in reputable institutions overseas, good library and computer facilties (or labs if you're involved with physical geography), a good number of contact hours. Academics hate these lists, but do take a look at http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/universityguide for example. Oh, and think about which city or place you would like to be. You will spend at least 3 years there, it makes sense to chose a place that will make you happy (for me, somewhere you can get out into decent cycling countryside, with hills, for a start... like York, Newcastle, Sheffield etc.)
And finally, you won't get to be a planner doing geography, you'd be better off doing err... planning, and more importantly a planning course accredited by the RTPI... if you were that way inclined.![]()
You sound like a very useful man to have around!!
marinyork said:Things like Erasmus is a good point actually, but not everywhere does it. Depends how good Montage's foreign languages are and if he wants to escape.

montage said:You sound like a very useful man to have around!!
Just give me a cyber slap when my PM's full of quieries get too annoying![]()
.Headgardener said:Geography is not a bad degree to have, at least if you need to go somewhere then you will know where it is and wont need a satnav to get there.

Dave5N said:No point anymore. We know where everywhere is now.
Buy a SatNav and get a job.
The youth of today! I've noticed even among student peers that some are very ignorant to the world around them - they are stuck inside all day and can tell you all about the latest gossip on trash TV like Big Brother and Hollyoaks, but not current affairs stories or do practical outdoors activities such as using a compass or map.Joe24 said:They got my teacher to explain 6 figure grid references, then looked at her blank and said, i dont get it.
One of them also thought that Jerusalum and Bethlehem were made up places and didnt exist.![]()
