Top 10 Hardest Oxbridge Interview Questions

 

We asked our top Oxbridge-educated mentors the hardest question they were asked in their interviews:

 β€œPeople keep saying English Literature is a useless subject. Why are they wrong?”

Adam Goodbody
Hertford College, Oxford 

Asked and answered in French β€œIt is clear that history shapes literature, but can you explain to what extent literature shapes history?”

Anya Davies
New College, Oxford

β€œWhat period do you think this was written in and why?”

Eloise Poulton 
Trinity College, Cambridge

β€œMy tutor gave me a plate with a bowl over it and told me he was going to show me five objects under the lid, and that I'd have 30 seconds to think and then 1 minute to relate the item to theology, and the items were horse hair, a bird skull, a tibetan prayer wheel and a bust of aristotle.

I was then asked after that if communism was incompatible for religion.”

Hugo McPherson
Brasenose College, Oxford

β€œWhy should students of literature care about Coronation Street?”

Rosalind Brody
Christ Church, Oxford

β€œHere are lines and dots. How would you play it?”

Conall McHugh
New College, Oxford

β€œCan literature exist without history?”

Camilla Dunhill
New College, Oxford

 

β€œI’ve seen the books on your Personal Statement. Right, what else have you read?”

Henry Faber
Balliol, Oxford

 

β€œWhat does the phrase political landscape mean in geographical terms?”

Rafe Studholme
St. Edmund Hall, Oxford

 β€œWhat is poetry?”

Andrew Dickinson
Christ Church, Oxford

 

β€œWhat does the light mean in Matthew’s Gospel?”

Walter Kerr
St Cuthbert’s Society, Durham

 

Learn more about how our mentors can support with the Oxbridge admissions process.

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