mickey raus wrote:stephisaint wrote:mickey raus wrote:dubmatters wrote:
In Poland university is free so getting even a remotely decent job is practically impossible without one. Sound familiar?
sounds very good actually
but of course not as good as making education a luxury
dark ages ffw
alien pimp
I don't think anyone's saying that.
Everyone's forgetting that all uni places are ALREADY oversubscribed. This means that every year those unlucky ones that don't get in have essentially had their career prospects ruined. The idea of making the places slightly more exclusive (based on merit not any social factor) is a way of increasing the employment validity of people who havn't got a degree. Increasing trade contracts/apprenticeships at the same time for anyone who doesn't lke the idea of going to uni seems fairer overall?
In terms of fees, I don't think anyone apart from the very very rich can afford uni, even now. Fee increases don't make that much of a difference... this is why there's student loans, which are held until later in life when you can pay part off (a percentage of your wage depending on how much you earn). The percentage difference is going to be minor and you get a worthwhile degree. At the same time people who don't go to uni are classed as more employable due to more worthwhile experience. I don't particularly agree with the fee increases and don't want the extra debt, but I can see why they're doing it. It's not fair that they try to gain back the economic loss (caused by the mistakes of the past 15 or so years) through the only people possibly able to afford it (a much easier target than businesses). It's not right but it's politics. To gain anything, you have to play along. I don't agree with it but that doesn't stop it being the way it is.
...I'd agree with the protests if they were marching for the extra taxation of banks and large buisnesses instead and providing a solution to the issue. As it stands these marches didn't do much but discredit the cause they were marching for..
i see where you're coming from and your posts are always quality
but i can't agree to this point: they're already rich, raising uni taxes is just like taxing more the rich
i personally know not so wealthy people who's families made great efforts to get them educated, for them every 100 pounds is a difference and can ruin things
but can't buy that this measure will make a difference for the budget or anything. it's nothing for the budget, it's everything for some people
so the only results i can foresee is more uneducated people, uk importing even more intelligence, and more uk students abroad, feeding the budgets of other countries
if the fees are already to high, then you should've been even before this shit in the streets marching for affordable education
and yeah, education should not be seen only like training for a job, this is very very very wrong!
alien pimp
I know what you mean, but I never said students were already rich. I can't technically afford uni but I'm still here. The concept of student loans/grants (which I believe are being increased for lower income families) is to take off the monetary pressure until you have a well paid job, that way the pressure is taken off the student and their family until such time as they can afford it. I know this isn't always the case though, which is a problem. On either side though they have to increase student loans in accordance with increasing fees, which should negligate the fee increase in these terms.
Saying that, I do agree that the largest fee changes are a bit extortionate and in regard to the fact that Scotland still has free university (charged to all British taxpayers) even if they study in England, it's a bit far, and I don't agree with the lowering of fees for over-seas students.
Theoretically education shouldn't only be seen in relation to getting a job but don't you think that's the main point? You get a degree to be able to work in an area you enjoy for the rest of your life. Society as it is at the moment demands you work (unless you're on social security), isn't the point of getting a good degree to help you get a good job you don't hate? I know most students I know say they're at uni to get a good job.. I havn't heard many, if any, say it's because they believe in the principle of education (until these demonstrations came about and suddenly it became an issue).
Unfortunately there's a massive problem in our country in that a rising number of young people don't care about education. If it was that important to most people, don't you think our high school grades would be higher, the x-factor viewing rates a bit lower? A society issue (which needs to be solved) regarding lack of interest in education, isn't going to be fixed by forcing students into uni courses they're not particularly interested in, and telling those that can't get into uni that they're now essentially worthless.
At university it's not as if you are being "educated" per se, you are just given 3 years of free time in which you are essentially expected to teach yourself. I have maybe 8 hours lectures a week. That isn't exactly being "taught". If knowledge and learning is something you prize in life (which a lot of people don't, having other goals), wouldn't you do this anyway? I know I still research into subjects that interest me despite not being officially "taught" them..
I also don't agree with the fact that academic learning at uni is also seen as the only form of "education". You'd probably get "taught" more on an apprenticeship scheme than you do at uni. Life experience is education. It simply depends on what you want to do with life, you shouldn't limit that to only being possible in university. What happens if people don't want to go to uni, or aren't suited to the self taught structure. I don't think it's fair that they should automatically be discriminated against (which is what is happening at the moment) because getting some degree wasn't suited to them.