English
What is A-Level English?
A-Level English tests your skills in reading, vocabulary, grammar, and understanding different types of texts. You read passages, answer questions about meaning, vocabulary, tone, and choose the best grammar usage. The exam focuses on clear understanding, not super advanced writing.
What it usually includes:
Reading comprehension
Vocabulary in context
Grammar and sentence structure
Choosing correct expressions
Analyzing tone and meaning in a passage
Faculties that use A-Level English (examples + percentages)
1) Faculty of Arts / Humanities (English major)
Uses about 40–60%, because the major needs strong English skills.
2) Faculty of Communication Arts
Often uses 20–40%, since English is part of media, communication, and global content.
3) International Programs (Bilingual or English-based)
Usually 40–60%, depending on the university.
4) Faculty of Business Administration
Some universities use 20–30%, because business fields often need English reading and communication.
5) Faculty of Education (English major)
Often 40–50%, for future English teachers.
6) Faculty of Liberal Arts
Usually 20–40%, depending on the program (tourism, languages, global studies, etc.).
7) Faculty of Medicine (some universities)
A small amount like 5–10%, because basic English reading helps with scientific terms.
EXAMPLE of Faculties Using A-Level English
Book Ranking
The book is very thick (about 500 pages) and cheap. But some parts are incorrect, and a few topics don’t match the exam blueprint.
Feels more like teaching than actual exam practice. Some questions have mistakes, but the price is cheap. The book is a bit heavy.
Good content with lots of practice questions (up to 6 sets). Pretty accurate. But the color design is sleepy and makes you feel tired while studying.
Overall okay, but it focuses more on teaching than real exam-style questions. The questions are not arranged like the real test.

