Student financing under Thatcher required initiative...
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Reply to: Reality bites for gradiuates!
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Previously on "Reality bites for gradiuates!"
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Originally posted by garnet View PostRight. Like this one in the middle.
https://www.facebook.com/sixteenthCg...type=3&theater
I am in, or i wish anyway......
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Originally posted by VectraMan View PostI think my student loan cost £13 per month to pay off. But then it was only £800.
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Originally posted by LondonManc View PostWe have a shortage off maths and physics teachers. Let's boost the number of, erm, history teachers?
https://www.facebook.com/sixteenthCg...type=3&theater
I am in, or i wish anyway......
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I think my student loan cost £13 per month to pay off. But then it was only £800.
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Originally posted by LondonManc View PostHow do you amass 42k of debt from 27k of fees? Sounds like he's funded a three-year p1ss up on top of his fees.
Course fees 9k per year.
Living expenses 5k per year.
Total 14k x 3 year course = £42k.
Not only do they have to pay the course fees .... but even students need somewhere to live and something to eat.
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Martin Lewis's take he is normally pretty good at explaining issues.
The viral letter about mis-sold student loans due to retrospective interest hikes is well meaning, but wrong - Martin Lewis' Blog...
However, while I agree with the sentiment – and the fact many students have been outrageously mis-sold loans due to changes – the content of the letter isn’t technically correct, and shows a continued general misunderstanding of how student finance works, that could mislead some.
So not to attack where he’s coming from, but to ensure people understand their own loans, I wanted to bash out a quick blog just explaining the situation (for a beginner’s guide to how loans really work see Student Loans Mythbusting).
This I think is key
For students who started university in 2012, it was said that the £21,000 level at which you start repaying would rise annually with average earnings from 2017. Last year the Government backtracked on that. So now it’s frozen until at least 2021, when they’ll then review it.
In practice this means students will pay more each year. Here’s an example to explain…
Imagine it’s 2021 and the threshold has increased to £23,000 a year and you earn £24,000 – you’d repay 9% of the £1,000 gap, so £90 a year. Yet as the threshold is frozen at £21,000 you have to repay 9% of the £3,000 gap, so three times as much: £270 a year.
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostHistory student:
University Challenge contestant Joly de Lotbiniere charged with rape and sexual assault | Daily Mail Online
History graduate Bartholomew Cuthbert Joly de Lotbiniere will go on trial next year accused of a string of sex attacks including rape, two sexual assaults and an attempted sexual assault on the same alleged victim.
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostFact is - maths/physics require far more intellect than history/english/media studies.
I get the part about needing to be able to understand the maths and all the theorems in the STEM subjects. but actually Emotional intelligence tends to be lower in those people because they tend to want to think in facts not feelings.
MeeJA studies sounds like a cop-out until you take the creative writing styles and subjective examination of a play or film and teach the class to break down the subject and describe it. No use until you have to sit though a business presentation written by a STEM grad
I have lost count of the number of ex-engineers that I have met that want to be Architects but can't describe what they are looking at or what they trying to get a third party to achieve when you take their hands off the physical medium. I get sick of low level designs that basically barf up a cisco config or bunch of IP addresses but cannot explain the services or their dependancies.
even when you break it down into something as easy as UML...
So yes the guy is upset that he got screwed by the government before he even started work. I don't blame him and I hope he gets a win because that will end the cozy little business of screwing kids before they know what a loan is and what it will do to them when they need a mortgage later on.
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History student:
University Challenge contestant Joly de Lotbiniere charged with rape and sexual assault | Daily Mail Online
History graduate Bartholomew Cuthbert Joly de Lotbiniere will go on trial next year accused of a string of sex attacks including rape, two sexual assaults and an attempted sexual assault on the same alleged victim.
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Originally posted by eek View PostBelieve me the university Alumni group will try their hardest....
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Originally posted by The_Equalizer View PostAre the universities not now selling a product? Every university has to display the Unistats figures with each course:
gov.uk - Unistats
Basically, enrolling in a degree programme not dissimilar to buying a car. The risk universities now take is not getting enough students to make the programme worthwhile. I can't see how they should be liable thirty years down the line for a student's debt. It's not as if the student will give them more should they do extremely well out of undertaking a degree.
Potentially if you get a degree you could end up earning more and so the initial cost is worth it.
If you decide against getting a degree you may hit a glass ceiling.
However does the ability to get a degree guarantee anything for an employer?
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostI've done both. The level of knowledge and ability required to get through a humanities degree and get a 2i is considerably less than that required for maths. Not to say, however, that both don't require hard work. However, humanities subjects are mainly about writing essays that regurgitate facts and arguments. Originality is not required, except to get a first, or at masters level and above.
A good maths student can easily get a degree in history etc. The converse is not true.
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Originally posted by IR35 Avoider View PostAt the moment the student and government are taking the risk, the universities should take some risk as well.
gov.uk - Unistats
Basically, enrolling in a degree programme not dissimilar to buying a car. The risk universities now take is not getting enough students to make the programme worthwhile. I can't see how they should be liable thirty years down the line for a student's debt. It's not as if the student will give them more should they do extremely well out of undertaking a degree.
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