The career advisor/​ university advisor I had at school was very unambitious, and it’s really cool that you’re thinking in this way! However, as others have said, don’t worry too much about A Level choice. Your choice of A levels won’t define your life.
I don’t think it’s a particularly strong sign of anything that you aren’t passionate about a particular path now. I only found out that I deeply enjoyed and cared about philosophy after I left school—many great subjects aren’t taught in exciting ways.
I’d probably suggest keeping numeracy (via maths, or failing that, a science or economics) as part of your roster if you can—from my and my friends’ experiences, it does seem to be one of the doors that you can actually close at the A level stage. (I’m actually considering doing a Maths A Level or something equivalent at age 25 because I think numeracy is an area I’m particularly bottlenecked in because of my humanities-focused education).
A couple of scattered thoughts:
The career advisor/​ university advisor I had at school was very unambitious, and it’s really cool that you’re thinking in this way! However, as others have said, don’t worry too much about A Level choice. Your choice of A levels won’t define your life.
I don’t think it’s a particularly strong sign of anything that you aren’t passionate about a particular path now. I only found out that I deeply enjoyed and cared about philosophy after I left school—many great subjects aren’t taught in exciting ways.
I’d probably suggest keeping numeracy (via maths, or failing that, a science or economics) as part of your roster if you can—from my and my friends’ experiences, it does seem to be one of the doors that you can actually close at the A level stage. (I’m actually considering doing a Maths A Level or something equivalent at age 25 because I think numeracy is an area I’m particularly bottlenecked in because of my humanities-focused education).
Good luck on your GCSEs!