An Answerbank Merchandising Opportunity
ChatterBank1 min ago
More lies from Labour.
https:/
Thats old people annoyed and now young people.
No best answer has yet been selected by webbo3. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm surprised so many school leavers choose to go to university now unless it's to obtain degrees necessary for their intended career.
In their position I would be deterred by the accumulation of debt & probably seek an alternative path into the world of work.
People I was at school with and have subsequently met didn't seem to suffer for the lack of a degree.
The main cause is that there are far too many universities now for the number of students who want to attend them. Perfectly good polytechnics and colleges have been upgraded to university status - there are now an absurd 131 UK universities listed in the Times Good University Guide.
No wonder many universities are closing courses and firing staff.
“The current system is unsustainable….”
Absolutely correct
“….and we need to raise tuition fees”
Not necessarily correct
What’s needed at the same time is a fundamental reassessment of what university is for, why people go there, what they get from it and how much (if anything) they should pay.
In particular, the entry requirements should be rigorously examined with a view to properly assessing whether or not people applying to go to university can actually cope with the requirements of an academic path. I have worked with people who come equipped with a degree (often from a former polytechnic college) who are scarcely able to string a coherent sentence together. Quite how they gained entry to a university, let alone coped with a rigorous degree course, always baffled me.
As well as that, the university loans scheme is being abused on an industrial scale. It was evident seven years ago:
https:/
And it’s still going on now:
What’s needed is a policy which shifts away from offering a degree course to people unable to cope with it and which they don’t need anyway. The idea that 50% of young people need to be educated to degree level is ridiculous. That should be knocked back to about 10-15% (and so align with the percentage of careers that actually require a degree).
There may then be sufficient funds then to educate those who actually require a degree for their chosen career virtually free of charge. Universities which thrive on awarding useless degrees will then be free to offer them to overseas students from whom they can demand whatever fees they like. It would also require the visa scheme to be rigorously policed so that only the students are allowed to settle here and only for the duration of heir course.
Of course, the Labour government has the answer:
“But at the same time we need to look at maintenance grants to help those who can least afford it.”
aka more ££££££s. If dealing with the train driver's dispute is anything to go by, the ££££s will be awarded and the underlying problems left for another day.
Blair basically destroyed the value of a university education, by convincing all and sundry they can get a degree we ended up with micky mouse degrees and mick mouse grads. In among them there are of course the usual acedemics that should be there, those that will go on to contribute to human endeavour. Sadly most grads these days are little better than the school leavers of the 70s with half a dozen O levels. Many are a lot worse and barely numerate and literate.
It costs young people enough already to go to UNI.
It normally involves the student leaving their home, which is added expense as it is.
My eldest daughter had to leave her home here in Cornwall and moved to London, but she said everything is so expensive to live in London, she even skips meals.
I never did trust Kier Starmer but hes certainly showing his true colours now isn't he?
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.