Dave
CF Legend
This has become the new touchy subject amongst students.
The government have drawn up plans to change the minimum tuition fee to raise from £3.2k a year to around double that of £5-7k and options to increase it to a maximum of £20k per year. This is called for from Universities to 'improve the quality of teaching' and has also had calls from students to demand if this increase happens is to find out where this money goes (I know I would want to know)
Also following these stories is that the campus life of university has totally changed, with more people living at home with parents throughout their degree, taking up one of two jobs just to stay afloat, and people just generally just going to classes and staying in and working, because its simply not enough money to last a term with such high accommodation fees, food, transport etc..
A survey from Swansea University found that during the cold winter snap students lost £20 a day because of cancelled lessons, with some classes cancelled for nearly 2 weeks at the university the students lost £200 on no education which has calls for lessons that are cancelled to be refunded or deducted from the tuition fees.
What do you think of the new rise?
I'm firmly against it, it'll cause a rapid decline in the amount of people wanting to go to university and to get people in high rise jobs, which is kinda what the country needs....
The government have drawn up plans to change the minimum tuition fee to raise from £3.2k a year to around double that of £5-7k and options to increase it to a maximum of £20k per year. This is called for from Universities to 'improve the quality of teaching' and has also had calls from students to demand if this increase happens is to find out where this money goes (I know I would want to know)
Also following these stories is that the campus life of university has totally changed, with more people living at home with parents throughout their degree, taking up one of two jobs just to stay afloat, and people just generally just going to classes and staying in and working, because its simply not enough money to last a term with such high accommodation fees, food, transport etc..
A survey from Swansea University found that during the cold winter snap students lost £20 a day because of cancelled lessons, with some classes cancelled for nearly 2 weeks at the university the students lost £200 on no education which has calls for lessons that are cancelled to be refunded or deducted from the tuition fees.
What do you think of the new rise?
I'm firmly against it, it'll cause a rapid decline in the amount of people wanting to go to university and to get people in high rise jobs, which is kinda what the country needs....