What I bring to the table:
I've been through a Cambridge admissions journey myself- preparing for the ESAT, and sitting multiple interviews. I scored in the 98th percentile for the ESAT, meaning I know what I'm doing when it comes to such an exam.
All of the areas I offer tuition in I know deeply and enjoy studying myself. This makes me a passionate and effective communictor in these subjects. I have read deeply and widely in all of these areas. By being a Natural Sciences student at Cambridge, I will continue to study mathematics, physics, and chemistry, meaning I will still be qualified to tutor in these areas compared to a chemistry student tutoring for A-level physics, whose highest qualifcation in physics is A-level, for example.
Throughout my time during sixth form, I took part in several Olympiad competitions. I received a Gold Award in the British Physics Olympiad, British Astrophysics Olympiad, RSC UK Chemistry Olympiad, and the UKMT Senior Maths Challenge. I also qualified for the Physics Olympiad and the Astrophysics Olympiad Round 2, scoring Silver in both, putting me in the top 60 physics students and top 30 astrophysics students in the country.
During Year 12, I was invited to participate in the Isaac Physics Senior Physics Challenge at the University of Cambridge, having ended up in the top 50 physics students who had applied. During this 4-day camp, I learnt loads of awesome quantum mechanics and decided to set my sights on Cambridge.
My belief that science is about sharing ideas to make other people curious is what led me to found a science club at my school, where I covered advanced topics such as black holes and quantum physics with younger students to inspire them. This quickly grew into something bigger: I ended up writing a full science course aimed at KS3 students, designed to explain complex topics in a way that's accessible but also intellectually engaging. The goal was always to spark genuine interest and encourage students to ask deeper questions about the world around them.
I hope to bring this spirit of curiosity to interview tuition. It's not about just getting the right answer, it's showing how excited you are to be thinking about a problem.