i have passed my as levels in ict and business. However i am well behind from completing the work in a2 ict by the may 30th deadline. Is it possible for my work to get submitted at a later date where i will get my a level grade later as a result or must all my work be submitted by the deadline. My a level in ict is for the exam board ocr and i am living in the uk.|||I've had a similar problem myself. But I was told by my college's examinations officer that all the exam boards set their exam deadlines and exam times WELL in advance, often anywhere up to 2 years in advance. These aren't flexible either- the boards have thousands of pieces to mark alongside exam papers.
So you won't be able to make a late submission unless there are extremely good reasons for you not being able to complete it, such as family deaths, natural disasters and fire.|||all the work i had to do for my a-levels had to be completed and handed in on the due-date.
try your best to get your work handed in.
goodluck|||The Teaching staff have to have time to look at/mark your coursework. And they have to send a certain number of pieces to the examing board. If you submit your coursework late you are at serious risk of failing the whole of your ICT A2, and putting the rest of the students on your course at risk as well.|||you got loadsa time!!
Thursday, December 8, 2011
From the date of this letter (19th April) you must submit your accounts within 14 days, What is the last day?
that I could have submitted the accounts?
I don't know if I should add this to business or maths :s ... business it is.|||The last day should be May 3, that would be 14 days from April 19th.|||look at a calendar. Start with April 20th as day one. Count to 14. there you go.|||May 9th. I'm assuming they meant BUSINESS days. Weekends and holidays don't count.|||You must have it sent by 30th of April. The actual last day would be 3rd of May, but to be on the safe side, you should sent it in early. If you sent it on 2nd or 3rd of May, when they receive it, it could be too late.|||Appeal the fine 鈥?so long as you have the letter and the correct date on it is in fact April 19th.
Add 14 to the date of the letter: April 19 + 14 = April 33. April has only 30 days so that leaves you May 3. (And it is from the date of the letter, not from the day before as would be the wording if you had to count the day of the letter's dating as Day 1 of the count.)
Usually, when multiples of 7 are specified, it means calendar days not "business days" which do not count weekends and legal holidays. This is not a factor here though as you chose May 3rd, not an even later date. Additionally, since you presented in person, there is no consideration about mailing times. But if there had been, the practice in the US is for the mail system's postmark date to be the legal date of submission and government entities are careful to get that right. You sound like you are in the UK, well, yes, given the fine's currency, so perhaps that is no help in finding the accepted practice there.
But the core of the matter is that May 3rd is absolutely the 14th day after April 19th and no question or funny quibble about it. Hopefully you saved the letter this long and were correct in picking the correct date to begin counting to 14. This almost sounds like the quibble of "A through K" vs. "A through K, inclusive."
Even if it is though, I firmly believe any entity issuing such commands and interpreting them in this odd manner would either be used to this interpretation (since it is so obviously correct!) OR be doing it to raise revenue with those fines and have a reputation for such behavior that will stand you in good stead after they deny your appeal of the fine and you escalate to the next higher level.
However, there is a lesson to be learned here and that is this: no matter what, always call upon receiving such letters and have someone there, whose name or identifier you obtain first in the conversation, formally define the actual due date, not just repeat the letter's formula. Ask for a supervisor if necessary. 拢100 is worth a bit of bother...
And finally, press your MP for a change to the government's methodology here: in the US, no government entity would ever bother with such a hazardous formula. They always clearly specify a date. Even if the underlying law specifies a formula, the entity will define the actual due date in any mailing and on its website. It will also indicate, clearly, if it uses the postmark date as the formal submission date. (The submissions that require payments to be enclosed are... spotty... about this. Usual practice is to require it arrive by the due date about 50% of the time.)
Good luck with the appeal. You should win if there is justice as you clearly did not untoward or unreasonable in your calculation of the due date.
I don't know if I should add this to business or maths :s ... business it is.|||The last day should be May 3, that would be 14 days from April 19th.|||look at a calendar. Start with April 20th as day one. Count to 14. there you go.|||May 9th. I'm assuming they meant BUSINESS days. Weekends and holidays don't count.|||You must have it sent by 30th of April. The actual last day would be 3rd of May, but to be on the safe side, you should sent it in early. If you sent it on 2nd or 3rd of May, when they receive it, it could be too late.|||Appeal the fine 鈥?so long as you have the letter and the correct date on it is in fact April 19th.
Add 14 to the date of the letter: April 19 + 14 = April 33. April has only 30 days so that leaves you May 3. (And it is from the date of the letter, not from the day before as would be the wording if you had to count the day of the letter's dating as Day 1 of the count.)
Usually, when multiples of 7 are specified, it means calendar days not "business days" which do not count weekends and legal holidays. This is not a factor here though as you chose May 3rd, not an even later date. Additionally, since you presented in person, there is no consideration about mailing times. But if there had been, the practice in the US is for the mail system's postmark date to be the legal date of submission and government entities are careful to get that right. You sound like you are in the UK, well, yes, given the fine's currency, so perhaps that is no help in finding the accepted practice there.
But the core of the matter is that May 3rd is absolutely the 14th day after April 19th and no question or funny quibble about it. Hopefully you saved the letter this long and were correct in picking the correct date to begin counting to 14. This almost sounds like the quibble of "A through K" vs. "A through K, inclusive."
Even if it is though, I firmly believe any entity issuing such commands and interpreting them in this odd manner would either be used to this interpretation (since it is so obviously correct!) OR be doing it to raise revenue with those fines and have a reputation for such behavior that will stand you in good stead after they deny your appeal of the fine and you escalate to the next higher level.
However, there is a lesson to be learned here and that is this: no matter what, always call upon receiving such letters and have someone there, whose name or identifier you obtain first in the conversation, formally define the actual due date, not just repeat the letter's formula. Ask for a supervisor if necessary. 拢100 is worth a bit of bother...
And finally, press your MP for a change to the government's methodology here: in the US, no government entity would ever bother with such a hazardous formula. They always clearly specify a date. Even if the underlying law specifies a formula, the entity will define the actual due date in any mailing and on its website. It will also indicate, clearly, if it uses the postmark date as the formal submission date. (The submissions that require payments to be enclosed are... spotty... about this. Usual practice is to require it arrive by the due date about 50% of the time.)
Good luck with the appeal. You should win if there is justice as you clearly did not untoward or unreasonable in your calculation of the due date.
What is the last date of C-form submit to sale tax authority?
iam a sales tax consultant, you may ask any doubt related sales tax. it may help me also. one c form is eligiable for every quarter.(ex) apr, may , june we have to submit before july 15th
Under a subpoena to submit material it says place and time and date, does that mean the p;lace to send the suo?
place the information is to be sent that is subpoena to and date and time expected to to receive subpoena information. or is place the subpoena is being sent too. i dont have an attorney and i doing my own civil suit. don't under stand the subpoena i need information to be subpoena to prove my my claim|||That would be the place the info is supposed to be sent to.!~!
I am persuing mba what to know when are addmission form for upsc and mpsc on net and last date to submit it?
proper grammar is something you should know.
Iam aleay submit on date 17.01.2008, but resently i was shift my house, how i get it my pan can please tell me
U have submitted U R pan application only on 17-01-2008 so the Pan card will not be despatched so go to the concerned company to which U have submitted the application and inform about this and submit the form for change of address and get it despatched to U R place right now where U R living.|||Please ask your question in English. What you wrote is not a question.|||Inform the new address to the service provider.|||Please go to the nearest UTI center or the place where you have submitted your application and give it in writing. I think this will do|||There are two ways.
1. Ask some one to collect your PAN card at the old address.
2. If no one to collect the same for you at the old, then you have to fill up "Request for new PAN card or/and changes or correction in PAN data" and submit it at the application center. Please find the FAQ's on PAN. Refer Q.No.37 in this connection.
http://www.tin-nsdl.com/faqPANreqfornewp鈥?/a>
Meanwhile track your PAN card status form the links given below and you can call the company (Mumbai) and ask what to do if the address is changed after application. The phone numbers also given after web link.
If your PAN application slip contains 15 digits Acknoledgement No.
https://tin.tin.nsdl.com/tan/StatusTrack鈥?/a>
Tel No. 022-2499 4650
If your PAN application slip contains 9 digit Application number and 9 digit coupon number
http://myutitsl.co.in/intra/web/pantrack鈥?/a>
Tel No. 022-27561690
1. Ask some one to collect your PAN card at the old address.
2. If no one to collect the same for you at the old, then you have to fill up "Request for new PAN card or/and changes or correction in PAN data" and submit it at the application center. Please find the FAQ's on PAN. Refer Q.No.37 in this connection.
http://www.tin-nsdl.com/faqPANreqfornewp鈥?/a>
Meanwhile track your PAN card status form the links given below and you can call the company (Mumbai) and ask what to do if the address is changed after application. The phone numbers also given after web link.
If your PAN application slip contains 15 digits Acknoledgement No.
https://tin.tin.nsdl.com/tan/StatusTrack鈥?/a>
Tel No. 022-2499 4650
If your PAN application slip contains 9 digit Application number and 9 digit coupon number
http://myutitsl.co.in/intra/web/pantrack鈥?/a>
Tel No. 022-27561690
From where i can get IGNOU solved question paper for MTE-04 2010..my last date to submit is 31 march?
please help me out friend|||IGNOU B.Sc / Mathematics MTE-04 Assignments 2010
http://www.indiastudychannel.com/resourc鈥?/a> IGNOU BCA Semester II Papers
http://entrance-exam.net/ignou-bca-semes鈥?/a>
http://www.indiastudychannel.com/resourc鈥?/a> IGNOU BCA Semester II Papers
http://entrance-exam.net/ignou-bca-semes鈥?/a>
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