Gcse Settlement
Thursday, June 24th, 2010gcse settlement
Get A Career In Quantity Surveying
Quantity surveyor jobs were hard to get hold of during the recession, but now jobs are being offered and they need to be filled. A quantity surveyor manages all costs relating to building projects, they are an important component in ensuring a construction project sticks to its budgeted costs and doesn’t exceed them.
They are involved in every stage, from the early calculations to the finalised figure when a project is complete. Quantity surveyors work to reduce the costs of a project and increase value for money, at the same time maintaining the required standards and quality.
Negotiating with their client’s representative on payments and the final settlement, is also a part of their responsibilities. They will have a range of points of contact and depending on the project, they may be working for the client or the contractor. They can also be based in different places, most commonly in the office or on site.
Quantity surveyors can also be known as construction, cost consultant or commercial managers. A quantity surveyor will also be expected to provide a costs analysis for repair and maintenance project work, provide advice on procurement, carry out early stage budgets and detailed cost plans, undertake feasibility studies for the client and ensure risk and value management and cost control.
Those who want to become a quantity surveyor can do so by achieving a BTEC or HND/HNC, they will need to have 4 GCSE’s between A-C. Though there are no specific requirements to begin the actual training to become a quantity surveyor, just if you want to be a qualified one with more opportunities.
Training to be a surveyor can be done so either through the Chartered Institute of Building (CIOB) or the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). To join the CIOB, you will need to hold an honours degree plus have two years relevant experience or pass the CIOB examination.
Graduate quantity surveyors can start on £14,0000, a chartered surveyor will earn around £24,000 and an associate will earn approximately £35,000. Different areas will provide different rates of pay.
About the Author
Jacobs Parkar is a freelance author and has the vast knowledge in Construction Jobs. For more information on Qs Jobs and Construction Recruitment Agencies, he suggests you to visit: http://www.maximrecruitment.co.uk
What case studies do I need for GCSE Geography Specification A?
I am studying Skills, Rivers and Glaciation in the first paper, the Physical paper.
I am studying Agriculture, Settlement and Managing Resources and Tourism in the second paper.
Please could someone advise me which case studies I need :
e.g. Boscastle floods for an example of an MEDC flood, Bangladesh floods as an example of an LEDC flood etc..
Thanks
are you with edexcel??
i have my geog exam tomoz
edit
physical world – no case studies but know landforms well
human world – land use in LEDC city – rio de janiero or Bangalore
Land use in Medc – may differnt to yours
economic world – ledc – intensive wet rice farming – ganges valley
med – eu studies – grange parm and merthyr farm (not same as yours?)
modern high tech industry – m4 corridor
tnc – fiat in brazil
natural worl – no case studies but need to know rainforest system
——–
second paper
managing the environment – floods and management – mississippi
coastal recession and management – mappleton
fragile environment – medc the broads
fragile environment ledc – logging in solomon islands
managing tourissm – ledc – phuket
medc – moutain area – liviogno
fragile environment – sustaining tourism – ledc – galapogas islands
fraigle environment sustaining tourism medc – yorkshire dales/malham
those are mine, so dont rely on them im guessin some will be the same
just chek in your text book
Sustainable Communities: Studying Settlement