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Leah Dean: [Music playing] [BTEC Award winner, Leah Dean, Where are they now?] I'm Leah Dean.
I'm studying computer science and management studies at Lancaster University. I ended up
here because I left school at 16, and I always knew I wanted to be an IT teacher. I didn't
really want to do anything else and didn't really know what else to study. It made sense
to do what I liked, which was IT. I chose a BTEC, because it just seemed like the most
logical thing to do at the time, it was going to buy me the strongest platform of knowledge.
In the first year of college I ended up researching universities and Lancaster was just the most
suitable course for me about what I enjoyed. I then applied, I was starting my second year,
and within a couple of days, actually, I got an offer which I was very happy about. First
one in my family to go to university. I'm from Manchester. I remember my first memory
of wanting to do so. I was in the back of my dad's car. We were driving down Oxford
Road in Manchester during graduation season. I seen all the graduates throwing their hats
in the air. At that time, I probably didn't know what it meant, but I knew that's what,
one day, I wanted to do. That's never changed really. My understanding has just got better.
I've always done IT during school. It was always something that I, particularly, excelled
at. I think you should do things that you do excel at because you're good at them. Being
good at them, it gives you a sense of purpose, and being good at something. From there I
just decided to do it at college and from college, from uni, it's been one clear-cut
path, if you like. Well, going back to my 16-year-old self, making these choices, it
made, and still makes, logical sense to me to have done a BTEC. I don't regret the decision
person with undergraduate or first academic degree. People who have a degree from a school, university. To move up from a position to a higher, better one.
The largest city in New Hampshire, on the Merrimack River, in the southern part of the state; population 108,586 (est. 2008)..
/ˌəndərˈstandiNG/
Being sympathetic. ability to understand something. To know the meaning of language, what someone says.
/ˈwän(t)iNG/
lacking in required or necessary quality. To desire or wish for something; hope for a thing.