Whether you’ve already booked your plane tickets or are only considering working or studying in another country, this article will help you prepare for what’s in store.

English is a vast and extremely broad degree. You will quickly learn that you need to be very learned about pretty much everything. An English student keeps up with current affairs, reads a range of genres and authors, knows sociology and has to be able to read twice as fast as other students.

So you’ve made it through university - the drunken nights, dizzy mornings and dinners that will never match the quality of Mum’s. Your final year is upon you and its time for the dreaded assignment: the dissertation.

Interviews tend to be over- and underestimated. It seems that whoever you turn to for advice will be blasé or completely frighten you into not wanting to go. If you’re prepped, the interview should go smoother than just turning up and you’ll have a better plan of what you are going to say and how to answer difficult questions thrown your way.

‘International Citizenship Service’ is a government run scheme that enables young British people to go to a developing country and work with a charity for three months.

The charity sector continues to grow and change, as it attracts more and more graduates each year. Here's what it's like working as a ‘Communications and Fundraising Officer’ for a small charity in Uganda.

With these eight tips, hopefully you can go from skint student to savvy saver.

After studying for exams and months of getting through your reading lists for the year, reading may be the last thing on your mind as summer approaches. But books can prove to be incredible guides that offer advice, motivation and inspiration!

We catch up with David, a Harper Adams graduate who farms in Warwickshire, to find out why he has decided to follow his family into this industry post-university.

Before making the decision to continue studying it is important to weigh up the pros and cons of a postgraduate course.