i agree wholeheartedly with you (HTH i mean)
when i went fees were at the first level they were set at (so ~£1000 a year). My parents paid mine (my parents are awesome) but there were plenty of people whose parents should have been paying it (according to the government policy, since it was based on parents' earnings) whose parents basically told them to $%&# off.
which was messed up.
I disagree with even £1000 because of teh slippery slope principle (which turned out in hindsight to be true)- it wasn't too long until they massively raised them.
I don't know how the hell you'd pay £9k a year (yes i realise you get to pay it back later). there are living expenses too (which normally aren't much less than 4-5k a year).
I dunno what the end result is gonna be. I guess we can only hope they go way too far and then there's a massive backlash and they get made free again. But that'll completely unfairly screw over a whole generation of people in the meantime. :(
^ +1
like in ireland. completely anonymous. i realise that the argument against that is that private school pupils tend to do better, but the alternative is even worse, if you ask me (where a lot of the time they let people in *because* they've been to private schools or because they know them).
except no personal statement. apart from anything (i.e. aside from it being a pain in teh ass to do and being no use) it could affect the anonymity of it. if someone says they play polo there's a fair chance they go to a private school, etc.
and no interviews either (again, anonymity).
EDIT: also :good: for mentioning NI as well in there. the shiteeety BBC news frequently says only english (and sometimes they mention the welsh too when they feel like it) don't have to pay fees in scotland as if teh english are hard done by. We damn well have to pay them if we go to uni in scotland too.
Actually funnily enough we get it free (or as free as it is... there are some (much lower than english) fees, just they're called something else :lol: ) if we go down south to uni.
On a more serious note studying a degree should be seen as an investment, sure you pay back a big debt when you earn over the threshold but so long the increase in earnings is more than the debt paid over the long term then it is a good investment.
how is it a good investment if it used to be (and should be) free?