This is wonderful news, Marc.  Coming into a university with so much 
experience can bring much pleasure, because it will be easier for you to 
separate the useful from the useless . . .  And, if UK universities are 
anything like those in the US, you may find that resources like 
big-ticket software and equipment will be incredibly less expensive for 
you to obtain with that student i.d., so if there is anything you have 
needed for your work, now is the time . . .  The main challenge may be 
the tact required (or the silence sometimes, which is even worse) when 
you encounter the latter.  On top of that, you have a fund of experience 
which will certainly be recognized and appreciated (apparently already 
with the admissions offer) -- and you may find that other students will 
want to participate in your work, so that you can undertake projects 
with more bodies than you have had before.  I don't think you need this 
"formal education" to gain stature, but it may come in handy for 
applying for grants and such. . .

Anyway, have fun and stay happy. . .

All best,
Martha

The Lost Shoe
http://www.chapbookpublisher.com/shop.html

The Lost Shoe video
http://www.sporkworld.org/Deed/lostshoe.mov

this is visual poetry by Millie Niss (27 March 2010 release)
this is visual poetry by Martha Deed (24 August 2010 release)
http://thisisvisualpoetry.com

Heat and 500 Favourite Words (Released July 2010)
http://chapbookpublisher.com/tiny-shop.html


On 10/11/2010 11:23 AM, marc garrett wrote:
> Hi Alan,
>
> Entering into education the wrong way round.
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