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uni tuition fees
BillieTheBot
Posts: 8,721 Bot
should they get rid of University tuition fees?
i must say when i came to this country for the first time and foiund out that your uni's were free i was absolutely shocked. it blew my mind.
when i found out my wife and her friends all got there education for free for 5 or 6 years,i actually thought they were shitting me lol, i had to pay over 100000 for mine.
Craig
i must say when i came to this country for the first time and foiund out that your uni's were free i was absolutely shocked. it blew my mind.
when i found out my wife and her friends all got there education for free for 5 or 6 years,i actually thought they were shitting me lol, i had to pay over 100000 for mine.
Craig
Beep boop. I'm a bot.
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Comments
English and Welsh students pay out their noses.
In canada everyone pays for there uni education, the only thing the government gets involved in is making sure anyone and everyone who wants to go to uni can. they do this by being the guarantee on the student loan, students still have to get a student loan from a high street bank, but they can not be refused for this loan, as the government takes the risk away from the bank by being the guarantor. you dont have to start payinmg the loan off until your employed and making a certain amount per year. you can take out the student loan to just cover your tuition ( or part of it if you have saved money ) or your tuition and living expenses, so you need not work during uni,.
Remember - if they can get you asking the wrong questions, they don't have to worry about the answers you come up with.
people are always going to pay, if the students dont pay then we as the taxpayers will pay, so who do you think should pay? the students for there own eduction, or the taxpayer?
lol what the hell are you talking about? investigates? what investigation?
You might see a lot of effort going into weapons research and ways to control populations through psychological techniques, as opposed to something like ways to make dumb people smarter.
Also you have the wondeful position of feeding intelligent folk the facts that they need to reach the conclusions that you want them to.
You get the idea.
Under the current system, the taxpayer.
Those students will one day become taxpayers and contribute to the education of the next generation.
but there is equal opurtunity with the system i mentioned, anyone and everyone who wants to go to uni can go
Why should I pay to educate a person, who has a high chance of going on in life to make more money than I ever did?
More to the point, why should all of you pay for me to learn a skill, with which I'm going to be earning £xxxxx per year?
Simple answer - I shouldn't, you shouldn't. We go to university to better our prospects, which means we'll end up earning more money than someone who hasn't gone. Why should the person who didn't go pay to fund the education of someone who did go?
Everyone has the right, and the means, to go through university. Many people have gripes with having to pay for it - I can't think of a fairer way to pay for ones education than borrow the money up-front from the government, and pay it back when one is earning.
The point is anyone can afford it - it isn't down to how much you earn, or your parents earn - it's about whether you're prepared to take on £12-18k of debt for a lifetime of higher earning potential.
--Burpy
it would be a right under the system i stated, like ive said many times, anyone would be able to go to uni, but they would pay. this whole mentality of getting something for nothing really surprises me
For all the reasons already mentioned.
Its not though is it? If people go to uni, end up earning more, they end up paying more tax.
it shouldnt, sure you get saddled with debt, but you are also making more money when you graduate, it all evens out in the short term, in the long term the student who spent the money will be better off than the person who didnt go into debt but also doesnt have the education
It does though. I graduated in 2002 with over £15,000 debt. I probably won't ever be in a position to pay it off. Lots of people I talk to at work (I'm an education and employment worker) are put off because of being saddled with debt.
give me a break, whether they end up paying more tax or not they still are making loads more than the AVERAGE person who didnt go to uni
They are paying more tax back in, they are making more money for the economy. You're a believer in making money for the economy aren't you?
not really, alot of people who do liberal arts degrees earn les in thier entire lifetime than those who left schoool at 18 and started to work.
then you really picked a crappy degree, you should easily be able to pay that off in 2 or 3 years, 4 atr the most, then your prospects are better than the person who didnt go to uni, and are stuck at that finacial level for good
What reasons? Do you have any thoughts on the matter of your own, or are you just bouncing off the opinions of someone else?
Everyone can afford it. The debt, when spread out over the 40-something years most graduates will be earning for, is much, much smaller than the increase in salary they have for having the degree.
No disrespect intended here, but if you aren't capable of paying off £15k over 5 years, you should have a look at living within your means, or consider a change of career as you've done something rather wrong.
--Burpy
I suggest you actually read the thread before sticking your oar in.
Nonsense.
Go on, it should be good for a laugh.
Oh I read the thread, I just couldn't find any information from yourself prior to my post. Other than:-
And you think that paying £15k back over 40 years, whilst earning £5k per year more than if you didn't have the degree, is nonsense?
How did someone with such narrow-minded views actually graduate?
--Burpy