I have already explained why in great detail.Lozzer wrote:Why should it?Up to the point when a person leaves school, yes. After that he has choices to make. If he decides not to go to university he is not going to starve to death - he will find other options, other opportunities. If he wishes to avail of a university education, and the fruits that will follow from it, then the responsibility for financing it should fall on his shoulders.
Part Time Students.But up front fees for over 100,000And yet again - there are no up front fees for full time students.
No it's not. The average Briton watches four hours of TV a day, 28 hours a week, and most of that is probably complete shit. Just cut back to 18 hours a week of X Factor and Strictly Come Dancing and you can have it all.Yes, over a numerable amount of years. Believe it or not, but that's quite an extensive amount of input and time.Hmmm...an average working week is forty hours, so they are spending a gigantic 10 hours a week studying.
Aw poor diddums. Blood, sweat and tears, eh? 9am until 3pm at school and then a couple of hours of homework for two whole years (less the huge swathes of summer, Easter and Christmas holidays). Actually, now I think about it you are absolutely right - the taxpayer should foot the bill for what is more than just an education: we should fund the experience of the "student lifestyle", that sacred state of adolescent bliss, that wonderful bank of eternally youthful memories of high jinks, rag weeks, parties and floppy hair. What could our hard earned money possibly be better spent on than such an entitlement? In fact it should be enshrined in human rights legislation.Because it's not what students have shed blood, sweat and tears for in attaining A levels. University is more than just education, it's an experience which all students should be entitled to.What's wrong with working in a full time job for 40 hours a week, then studying or an hour and a half in the evening for a distance learning course?
Oh, and by the way, I studied music full time for three years. I maxed out my student loans and overdraft, I had no grant and no parental support - so I worked full time in a bar to support myself and did a full time degree while 99% of those around me pissed every penny they had up against the wall and then some. I paid my £10,000 overdraft and student loans off eight years after graduating, even though I didn't once pass the £15,000 income threshold which would have forced me to pay it. It was a piece of piss, but if it had been £30,000 to be honest I would have lumped it in with my mortgage.
Most students need to wise the fuck up and grow the fuck up. The world owes you nothing.