22 AS of Pakistani Student

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Ali Moeen Nawazish

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Achievements of Ali Moeen Nawazish

One ambition was fixed in Ali Moeen Nawazish's mind as he made his way through school in Pakistan. He wanted to win a place at Cambridge.Sitting seven A-levels might easily have done the trick, even though he had started to study some of the subjects only three days before the exam. But he was determined to get some good grades. So he sat another three, and three more. Then another nine. Just in case, he took a couple of AS levels along the way. The, at that time, 18 year-old boy# took the long list of exams within 12-months.The result? The remarkable young student, who modestly explains he has 'quite a thirst for knowledge', secured 22 A grades, one B and a C.When he filled out his university application forms at home in Rawalpindi there was barely enough space to list his qualifications. His Cambridge dream came true and he became due to win another place - in the Guinness Book of Records.In an interview, he said:"I'm doing my current degree because I love it, but what I want to do for the rest of my life is to be a doctor, so I hope to go on to study medicine." Ali, who speaks Urdu, English and Punjabi, sat all the exams within 12 months at Rawalpindi's Roots College International. His entry was organized through accredited boards Ed-Excel and Cambridge International Examinations. Ali also achieved a top score in the U.S. admissions test and was accepted by most Ivy League institutions, including Harvard and Yale. Apart from core science subjects he is almost entirely self taught. He studied for up to 12 hours a day. Hardest part was the exams, which he described as 'a mental endurance battle'. For two weeks he had a minimum of four every day, sometimes from 8am to midnight to avoid timetable clashes.

He still managed to keep up his leisure pursuits, however, playing the guitar, cricket and table tennis, and editing his school newspaper. He even found time for a trip to America to attend a Harvard leadership course. But it wasn't always like that. Ali's incredible talent began to emerge only at the age of 15. He was a chubby boy and many of his early results were mediocre. He said: "Then one day it all clicked. I needed to prove to myself, and to others, that I could do it."At O-level - still an internationally recognised qualification - he got nine A grades. Then came the A-levels. His mother Nisar Malik, 48, father Zaka Ullah, 51, both doctors, though worried about his workload, were very supportive. "They always said that if I was happy, they were happy," he said. "Now they love the fact that I've done so well."

So just how does he manage to achieve so much? One teacher described him as having 'a mind like a scanner' but Ali says he does not have a photographic memory. He simply enjoys learning. "The way I work is by spending ten minutes on one subject, then switching to another, then another. It's a bit haphazard but it works."