Oxbridge Interview Questions

Oxbridge Interview Questions

There are lots of myths and misconceptions about interviews at Oxford and Cambridge - candidates asked to throw bricks out of windows, being left in ornate rooms for hours, met with stony-eyed, intimidating professors. The reality, thankfully, is much less daunting. Interviews are a chance for tutors to simulate what’s called a “tutorial” at Oxford and a “supervision” at Cambridge- small (often 1:1) teaching sessions with professors. The interview is a chance for candidates to demonstrate passion and thinking. They won’t be expected to recite prepared, articulate, decisive answers but to demonstrate incisive, independent analysis - an ability to respond to new material and to think innovatively on the spot. We have compiled a list of subject specific questions for both Oxford and Cambridge to help students as they prepare.


Archaeology and Anthropology

  • What is the difference between History of Art and Archaeology and Anthropology?

  • Why, might you argue, is excavating battlefields morally unacceptable? 

  • How would you test the material of pots and what are the different dating techniques?

  • How do you justify the government funding archaeology and anthropology studies?

  • What is the biggest challenge faced by modern anthropologists?

Architecture

  • How would you design a classical building?

  • What are your thoughts on modern developments?

  • What buildings would you prefer to design?

  • What do you think are the biggest challenges architects face today?

  • Who is your favourite architect?

Biochemistry

  • Describe how DNA is converted to protein

  • Why do you want to study biochemistry when it is not taught at school?

  • Why is life carbon based and not silicon based?

  • Describe polypeptide formation

  • What happens to aspirin when we dissolve it in water?

Biology

  • How is the resting potential maintained in an electrically active cell?

  • Can the Earth be seen as a living organism?

  • Is genetic mutation good or bad?

  • What is the general anatomy of the primate brain?

  • What are the different oxygen affinities that a mountain goat and a foetus has?

Chemistry

  • How many water molecules are there in a glass of water?

  • Describe some of the trends across a periodic table and down a group

  • Explain the bonding in benzene

  • Why is water used to dilute solutions?

  • Why can’t you unboil an egg?

Classics

  • Can a translator ever make their translation completely neutral?

  • How do languages spread and evolve?

  • Is the Aeneid pro or anti Roman?

  • What are the differences between Europides; and Sophocles’ ‘Electra’?

  • Thoughts on the different portrayals of war and human suffering in the Aeneid and Illiad

Computer Science

  • What properties would a computer system in an aeroplane need to have?

  • Who invented the computer?

  • How small can you make a computer?

  • Can computers think?

  • What are the different programming languages and what are their respective advantages?

Economics / Economics and Management

  • Why are some countries rich and others poor? 

  • Are there any resources that are not scarce?

  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of privatising the Royal Mail

  • What was the main cause of the global recession?

  • Why is economics useful to society?

Engineering

  • Why do we feel increasing pressure when going deeper underwater?

  • Why do objects float in water?

  • Why is aluminium silver and copper brownish?

  • Derive an equation for the motion of a pendulum

  • An empty glass with ice cubes at the bottom is filled to the top. The ice then melts: does the water level go up, down or stay the same?

English Literature

  • What is satire?

  • Is Austen’s use of direct speech as effective as her use of indirect free speech?

  • What makes a book be loved and admired by readers?

  • What is literature?

  • Which of the books that you are studying do you enjoy the most and which is the text that is freshest in your mind?


Geography

  • It is widely reported that humans impact the environment, but how does the environment impact humans?

  • Define culture

  • How can colonisation be related to globalisation?

  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of international aid?

  • How does a geographer’s job differ to that of an economist or a politician?

History

  • Does historiography eradicate or create myths?

  • Which sources are best to use?

  • How do you discriminate between opposing views of modern historians?

  • Do we ever learn from the past?

  • Can history stop the next war?

History of Art

  • What is the definition of aesthetic?

  • Would taxidermy be considered art?

  • What is art?

  • What work of art would you most like to own?

  • How much can colour tell you about the social context of the painting?

Law

  • Do we have a moral obligation to obey the law and on what grounds is this obligation founded?

  • Discuss a legal issue that has been in the news recently?

  • How would you reform the prison system?

  • What justifications would you put forward for depriving a person of their liberty?

Mathematics

  • n has 4 distinct divisors, including 1 and itself. the sum of the divisors = 80. Find n.

  • Sketch y = x^5 - x^3. Hence sketch y^2 = x^5 - x^3

  • A moving ball hits a stationary one and collides elastically, the resultant speeds are equal. Find the ratio of masses. 

  • There are three pairs of shoes. When looking at one pair I have 1/3 chance to choose that pair and 1/3 chance to start looking at each of the others. If I start looking at pair A what is the chance that I will eventually pick it?

  • The numbers 3,5,7 are three consecutive odd numbers which are all prime.  How many other such three consecutive odd numbers are there that are all prime.  Prove it.

Medicine

  • How does dialysis work?

  • What is epigenetics and is it important?

  • What are the two most important scientific discoveries in medicine?

  • What is so special about the structure of DNA?

  • Discuss a medical ethics issue of your choice

Modern Languages

  • What is the difference between a philosophical novel and a philosophy essay?

  • What is the role of the translator?

  • What determines how easy it is to learn a language?

  • In what ways does language define our culture and identity? 

  • How do accents arise?

Oriental Studies

  • What is the relationship between historical and modern events in the Middle East?

  • How do you perceive the Middle East and their literature?

  • What are the challenges China faces in the coming years?

PPE

  • Who should pay for climate change?

  • What is globalisation and how would you measure it?

  • If you had to destroy the Sistine Chapel or the Grand Canyon which would you choose and why?

  • What does logic mean to you?

  • What is democracy?

Philosophy

  • What is an explanation?

  • To what extent should we have surveillance and where should the line be drawn between public and private domains?

  • What is the philosophy of memory and what conditions are necessary to remeber anything?

  • Are there any decisions in a democratic society that you believe should not be made by vote?

  • What areas within philosophy are you interested in?

Physics

  • Sketch the graph of exp (1/x)

  • What velocity do you need to start off with to make a complete loop of a rollercoaster

  • Why are soap bubbles spherical?

  • Why do we feel pressure?

  • Why does a helium balloon rise in the atmosphere?

Veterinary Science

  • What is the role of the vet in society?

  • What do you understand about the responsibility of the vet for human health?

  • Explain the procedure of embryo implantation?

  • What kind of qualities does a vet need?

  • Describe an animal case that interests you.

 

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