New survey suggests 10% of current A-level students put off applying in UK, with nearly half considering going abroad One in 10 students currently studying for A-levels has been put off university because of the increase in tuition fees next year, a new survey suggests. In addition, half of those polled would consider going to a local university to save money, while just under half said they would consider studying abroad to avoid the sharp increase in fees. The ComRes survey, commissioned by the BBC, shows that almost two-thirds would consider apprenticeships as an alternative to a degree. The survey has been published as a weekend report suggested that some universities are experiencing a steep drop in demand for courses beginning next September, with one, City University London, saying applications are down 41.4%. Goldsmiths has reported a 35% drop while Brunel has 24% fewer candidates, according to figures gathered by the Sunday Times. The survey of universities appears to match the ComRes survey, showing a broad decline of about 10%. However, some universities, including the London School of Economics, Queen Mary, and Bath, are seeing rises in applications, according to the report. The Universities and Colleges Admission Service (Ucas) is due to release figures today for the number of applications received by 15 October, the deadline for Oxford, Cambridge and courses in medicine, dentistry, and veterinary medicine. Candidates for other universities have until 15 January to apply, but there has been a trend for early submissions. An Ucas spokesman indicated that demand for Oxbridge and medical courses has held up this year. He said: “In the figures we’re going to publish there’s a difference between the overall headline figure to date and the figures for Oxbridge and medicine courses where the early deadline makes a difference. It’s just too early in the cycle for us to say whether we’re going to see a drop in demand [overall].” Demographic factors could also be behind any dip in applications. The number of 18-year-olds in the UK is projected to decline for the rest of this decade. A number of universities are now reconsidering the amount they intend to charge after the government gave them incentives to set an average fee under £7,500. In July, a government watchdog announced that the estimated average fee across all English universities was £8,393. At the time, 47 planned to charge the maximum of £9,000 as their standard fee. The BBC Inside Out/ComRes survey, which interviewed 1,009 A-level students in England this month, found the vast majority were worried about the burden of debt and thought it hard to get a job after university. But most still planned to go to university. Wes Streeting, chief executive of the Helena Kennedy Foundation, an educational charity, said: “My main concern is about widening participation. If it is the case that higher tuition fees are having a detrimental impact on the number of applications, then schools, colleges and government need to redouble their efforts to get the facts out. “When people look at the details, some of the fears that families still have about paying fees upfront may be allayed.” Under reforms introduced by the government last year, students will be able to take out state-backed loans to pay for their fees, as they do now. In future, graduates will pay back 9% of their income above £21,000. Graduates will pay interest on their loans, of a maximum of inflation plus 3%. Any outstanding repayments will be written off after 30 years, so graduates with low lifetime earnings will be protected. A poll earlier this month showed the number of teenagers enrolled at further education colleges in England declining for the first time in 12 years, with some institutions reporting a slump in numbers of up to 15%. The Association of Colleges asked half the colleges in the country – 182 institutions – how enrolments for this autumn compared year-on-year. Overall, the number of students had dropped by 0.1%, the equivalent of almost 600 students. But in a quarter of the colleges, the number of students had fallen by between 5% and 15%. Tuition fees Higher education Students University of London University administration University funding Apprenticeships Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …New survey suggests 10% of current A-level students put off applying in UK, with nearly half considering going abroad One in 10 students currently studying for A-levels has been put off university because of the increase in tuition fees next year, a new survey suggests. In addition, half of those polled would consider going to a local university to save money, while just under half said they would consider studying abroad to avoid the sharp increase in fees. The ComRes survey, commissioned by the BBC, shows that almost two-thirds would consider apprenticeships as an alternative to a degree. The survey has been published as a weekend report suggested that some universities are experiencing a steep drop in demand for courses beginning next September, with one, City University London, saying applications are down 41.4%. Goldsmiths has reported a 35% drop while Brunel has 24% fewer candidates, according to figures gathered by the Sunday Times. The survey of universities appears to match the ComRes survey, showing a broad decline of about 10%. However, some universities, including the London School of Economics, Queen Mary, and Bath, are seeing rises in applications, according to the report. The Universities and Colleges Admission Service (Ucas) is due to release figures today for the number of applications received by 15 October, the deadline for Oxford, Cambridge and courses in medicine, dentistry, and veterinary medicine. Candidates for other universities have until 15 January to apply, but there has been a trend for early submissions. An Ucas spokesman indicated that demand for Oxbridge and medical courses has held up this year. He said: “In the figures we’re going to publish there’s a difference between the overall headline figure to date and the figures for Oxbridge and medicine courses where the early deadline makes a difference. It’s just too early in the cycle for us to say whether we’re going to see a drop in demand [overall].” Demographic factors could also be behind any dip in applications. The number of 18-year-olds in the UK is projected to decline for the rest of this decade. A number of universities are now reconsidering the amount they intend to charge after the government gave them incentives to set an average fee under £7,500. In July, a government watchdog announced that the estimated average fee across all English universities was £8,393. At the time, 47 planned to charge the maximum of £9,000 as their standard fee. The BBC Inside Out/ComRes survey, which interviewed 1,009 A-level students in England this month, found the vast majority were worried about the burden of debt and thought it hard to get a job after university. But most still planned to go to university. Wes Streeting, chief executive of the Helena Kennedy Foundation, an educational charity, said: “My main concern is about widening participation. If it is the case that higher tuition fees are having a detrimental impact on the number of applications, then schools, colleges and government need to redouble their efforts to get the facts out. “When people look at the details, some of the fears that families still have about paying fees upfront may be allayed.” Under reforms introduced by the government last year, students will be able to take out state-backed loans to pay for their fees, as they do now. In future, graduates will pay back 9% of their income above £21,000. Graduates will pay interest on their loans, of a maximum of inflation plus 3%. Any outstanding repayments will be written off after 30 years, so graduates with low lifetime earnings will be protected. A poll earlier this month showed the number of teenagers enrolled at further education colleges in England declining for the first time in 12 years, with some institutions reporting a slump in numbers of up to 15%. The Association of Colleges asked half the colleges in the country – 182 institutions – how enrolments for this autumn compared year-on-year. Overall, the number of students had dropped by 0.1%, the equivalent of almost 600 students. But in a quarter of the colleges, the number of students had fallen by between 5% and 15%. Tuition fees Higher education Students University of London University administration University funding Apprenticeships Jeevan Vasagar guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Pardon my French, but what in the hell is Ron Paul talking about? Up until this time, I’ve sort of brushed off Ron Paul as consistent, but ultimately clueless (sorry, you Paul fans, but libertarianism does not and cannot work. It’s not up for debate; it’s a ridiculous mindset that glorifies selfishness and ignores that sometimes in life, things happen, and the measure of a society is how the least of us is cared for.) But listening to him tout his economic plan to David Gregory, I’ve had to conclude that he’s more than clueless, he’s outright delusional. To the surprise of no one, Paul’s economic plan involves cutting $1 trillion immediately, mostly by eliminating the Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce, Interior and Education departments. Paul’s plan would eliminate jobs for 200,000 federal employees, whom he deems “nonproductive”. But never fear, Paul assures us that “nobody will be hurt”: GREGORY: Let’s get right to your plan. This week, you unveiled a plan to cut the deficit and deal with the economy. The key elements of it is that you want to cut $1 trillion of spending in the first year. To do that, you would eliminated five cabinet departments, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce, Interior and Education. On Monday in Las Vegas, you unveiled a plan and this is what you said about it. PAUL: I have a personal conviction that this will not hurt anybody. You have government spending, that goes back to you. Um, huh? Our economy is teetering on the precipice of a double dip recession (and I’ve seen some pretty persuasive arguments of late that we’re already there) and you think putting 200,000 employees out of work and cutting five departments won’t hurt anybody? Maybe I’m too literal-minded for this argument, but I fail to see how more people out of work, less money going out to various factions (because when HUD allocates money to low income housing, that money goes to JOBS building low income housing, or when Energy budgets for alternative energy funding, that money goes to provide JOBS building wind turbines, etc.) and cutting education for future workers is going to be beneficial to the country, even if the deficit is corrected. And economists on the right and left agree : By reducing the deficit from more than $1 trillion to $300 billion in just a year, Paul’s plan would upend the economy at a time when it’s already fragile, says Gus Faucher, director of macroeconomics for Moody’s Analytics. “That much deficit reduction in one year is going to be a huge drag on the economy . . . the reduction in spending is much greater than cuts in taxes,” says Faucher. “We’re seeing that impact in Europe right now, where severe fiscal austerity has caused big problems for the European economy.” While long-term deficit reduction is important, legislators need to make sure that the economy is strong before major cuts take effect, he adds, calling Paul’s plan “much more ambitious” than other Republican proposals to date. By comparison, the Congressional supercommittee is required to cut $1.5 trillion over a ten-year period—a feat Paul wants to accomplish in a little more than one year. Liberal economists were even more dire in their assessments of the Paul budget. “This is almost having the economy fall off a cliff,” says Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, estimating that cutting $1 trillion in 2013 would prompt the unemployment rate to jump by 3 percentage points. Even if the $1 trillion in cuts were done over two or three years’ time, there would still be double-digit employment, Baker concludes. “This will make it extremely hard to balance the budget, since if the unemployment rate goes to 11 or 12 percent, then the budget picture will look much worse. If his response is still more cuts, then who knows how high he can get the unemployment rate.” Michael Ettlinger, vice president for economic policy at the Center for American Progress, said Paul’s cuts would destroy the social safety net, as the plan would turn Medicaid and other low-income entitlement programs into block-granted programs that would depend on discretionary appropriations. “Your kids would be out of school, working or begging,” he concludes. Of course, Paul denies this economic certitude. Because in the Randian utopian in which he lives, this is the perfect opportunity for Americans to take care of themselves by shirking the moocher constraints having social safety nets provided by the government to be the supermen they were destined to be. But Paul’s rationalization for this is even more delusional than simply worshipping Rand. He makes up out of whole cloth the reason we got out the Great Depression. GREGORY: How is that possible that a draconian cut like this would not hurt anybody, particularly in this economy? PAUL: Because we have to take this money from the economy, and the fewer politicians get to spend it, so that’s a negative. It hurts the economy. After World War II, we cut spending by 60% and cut taxes. 10 billion people came home and all the money and the expenditures went back to the people, and that was finally, we got over the Depression, by having these draconian cuts. Where the hell is he getting these facts? Roosevelt tried to cut spending and make allowances for business to encourage hiring and guess what? We slid deeper into the depression . What allowed us to get out of the Great Depression was the New Deal: government spending, the government Works Program and the implementation of the most successful social safety net program: Social Security. All programs that would be eliminated by President Ron Paul. Like I said, absolutely delusional.
Continue reading …Pardon my French, but what in the hell is Ron Paul talking about? Up until this time, I’ve sort of brushed off Ron Paul as consistent, but ultimately clueless (sorry, you Paul fans, but libertarianism does not and cannot work. It’s not up for debate; it’s a ridiculous mindset that glorifies selfishness and ignores that sometimes in life, things happen, and the measure of a society is how the least of us is cared for.) But listening to him tout his economic plan to David Gregory, I’ve had to conclude that he’s more than clueless, he’s outright delusional. To the surprise of no one, Paul’s economic plan involves cutting $1 trillion immediately, mostly by eliminating the Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce, Interior and Education departments. Paul’s plan would eliminate jobs for 200,000 federal employees, whom he deems “nonproductive”. But never fear, Paul assures us that “nobody will be hurt”: GREGORY: Let’s get right to your plan. This week, you unveiled a plan to cut the deficit and deal with the economy. The key elements of it is that you want to cut $1 trillion of spending in the first year. To do that, you would eliminated five cabinet departments, Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce, Interior and Education. On Monday in Las Vegas, you unveiled a plan and this is what you said about it. PAUL: I have a personal conviction that this will not hurt anybody. You have government spending, that goes back to you. Um, huh? Our economy is teetering on the precipice of a double dip recession (and I’ve seen some pretty persuasive arguments of late that we’re already there) and you think putting 200,000 employees out of work and cutting five departments won’t hurt anybody? Maybe I’m too literal-minded for this argument, but I fail to see how more people out of work, less money going out to various factions (because when HUD allocates money to low income housing, that money goes to JOBS building low income housing, or when Energy budgets for alternative energy funding, that money goes to provide JOBS building wind turbines, etc.) and cutting education for future workers is going to be beneficial to the country, even if the deficit is corrected. And economists on the right and left agree : By reducing the deficit from more than $1 trillion to $300 billion in just a year, Paul’s plan would upend the economy at a time when it’s already fragile, says Gus Faucher, director of macroeconomics for Moody’s Analytics. “That much deficit reduction in one year is going to be a huge drag on the economy . . . the reduction in spending is much greater than cuts in taxes,” says Faucher. “We’re seeing that impact in Europe right now, where severe fiscal austerity has caused big problems for the European economy.” While long-term deficit reduction is important, legislators need to make sure that the economy is strong before major cuts take effect, he adds, calling Paul’s plan “much more ambitious” than other Republican proposals to date. By comparison, the Congressional supercommittee is required to cut $1.5 trillion over a ten-year period—a feat Paul wants to accomplish in a little more than one year. Liberal economists were even more dire in their assessments of the Paul budget. “This is almost having the economy fall off a cliff,” says Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, estimating that cutting $1 trillion in 2013 would prompt the unemployment rate to jump by 3 percentage points. Even if the $1 trillion in cuts were done over two or three years’ time, there would still be double-digit employment, Baker concludes. “This will make it extremely hard to balance the budget, since if the unemployment rate goes to 11 or 12 percent, then the budget picture will look much worse. If his response is still more cuts, then who knows how high he can get the unemployment rate.” Michael Ettlinger, vice president for economic policy at the Center for American Progress, said Paul’s cuts would destroy the social safety net, as the plan would turn Medicaid and other low-income entitlement programs into block-granted programs that would depend on discretionary appropriations. “Your kids would be out of school, working or begging,” he concludes. Of course, Paul denies this economic certitude. Because in the Randian utopian in which he lives, this is the perfect opportunity for Americans to take care of themselves by shirking the moocher constraints having social safety nets provided by the government to be the supermen they were destined to be. But Paul’s rationalization for this is even more delusional than simply worshipping Rand. He makes up out of whole cloth the reason we got out the Great Depression. GREGORY: How is that possible that a draconian cut like this would not hurt anybody, particularly in this economy? PAUL: Because we have to take this money from the economy, and the fewer politicians get to spend it, so that’s a negative. It hurts the economy. After World War II, we cut spending by 60% and cut taxes. 10 billion people came home and all the money and the expenditures went back to the people, and that was finally, we got over the Depression, by having these draconian cuts. Where the hell is he getting these facts? Roosevelt tried to cut spending and make allowances for business to encourage hiring and guess what? We slid deeper into the depression . What allowed us to get out of the Great Depression was the New Deal: government spending, the government Works Program and the implementation of the most successful social safety net program: Social Security. All programs that would be eliminated by President Ron Paul. Like I said, absolutely delusional.
Continue reading …While other princesses (ahem, Kate) like to stay indoors, Princess Letizia of Spain has been busy with numerous official appearances — and lots of lovely outfits! The Spanish royal stepped out on Friday and Saturday in her slim-cut, earth-toned signature style. With Prince Felipe by her side, Letizia attended two ceremonies for The Prince of Asturias Awards, annual prizes awarded in Spain for achievements in the sciences, humanities and public affairs. Earlier in the day, the royal wore a tweedy sheath with navy appliques paired with beige pumps and her hair down loose. For the ceremony in the evening, Letizia got dressed up in a sheer brown, flowery dress. She opted for a super-chic up-do and diamond drop earrings that looked royally perfect as she sat in a red velvet throne-like chair. But it was back to basics the next morning, as the princess donned trousers, a white button-down and a blazer to visit the Spanish village of San Tirso de Abres. She also brought along a pair of glamorously large sunnies (which we’re rather upset she didn’t wear). Check out the royal’s weekend looks!
Continue reading …(CNN) – Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann continued to hit rival Herman Cain’s conservative credentials Sunday amid a recent dust up over comments he made about abortion. Bachmann said the remarks made earlier this week were further evidence of the businessman’s “troubling” policy shifts. “You can’t have all of these flip-flops in our nominee, one
Continue reading …More children and partners likely to be cross-examined in court by alleged assailants, Manifesto for Family Justice claims An increasing number of victims of domestic abuse, including children, will be cross-examined in court by their alleged assailants if the government goes ahead with plans to cut legal aid, a coalition of family and children’s charities has warned. In a manifesto sent to all MPs, the group – which includes the Bar Council, the children’s commissioner, Liberty, Women’s Aid and Gingerbread – calls on ministers to protect vulnerable children and partners in divorce and family proceedings. The legal aid, sentencing and punishment of offenders bill, which will save £350m a year from the legal aid budget, has completed its committee stage in the Commons and will be debated on the floor of the house next week. The justice secretary, Ken Clarke, has said he wants to do away with “compensation culture”. Restrictions are being imposed on access to legal aid in divorce and family proceedings. The Ministry of Justice has said legal aid will be preserved for those who suffer violence and psychological abuse in domestic disputes. Family charities and the legal profession claim the definition remains too narrow and that alleged perpetrators will not be entitled to legal representation, resulting in many conducting personal cross-examinations. This already happens on rare occasions but is likely to become far more widespread under the proposed reforms, according to the Manifesto for Family Justice. Stephen Cobb QC, chairman of the Family Law Bar Association, said: “We will see an increasing number of people going to court on their own without representation. “That is DIY justice, not access to justice. We face the very real prospect that many children and women who have been victims of domestic abuse will have to endure the further trauma of being cross-examined by their alleged perpetrator, who will not be eligible for legal aid. “We are facing a disturbing new landscape in which 600,000 people will no longer receive legal aid, 68,000 children will be affected by the removal of legal aid in family cases, 54,000 fewer people will be represented in the family courts annually and there will be 75% fewer private law cases in court. “When the government consulted on these proposals, virtually no one supported them. The civil legal aid cuts will be bad for children, bad for women and bad for families.” The Bar Council represents barristers in England and Wales. The manifesto states that the “narrow definition of domestic abuse [used in the bill] is more restrictive than that used by the Home Office and the Association of Chief Police Officers and will limit legal aid to victims of certain types of abuse”. Itsuggests that because of problems likely to be created for the courts, the government may not save money and could even be faced with increased costs. Fiona Dwyer from Women’s Aid said: “A lot of people will end up being cross-examined by their ex-partner. We have increasing evidence of that, but it’s going to be much worse in future if men are not going to be able to access legal aid. “Women are going to be pressurised into making informal arrangements which will place them at risk of harm. We would be concerned that more children would be at risk.” Jane Wilson of Resolution, which represents family lawyers, said: “We are really worried that the bill will reduce access to justice for the poorest in society.” Other signatories of the manifesto include the Association of Lawyers for Children, Co-ordinated Action Against Domestic Abuse, and the National Federation of Women’s Institutes. Domestic violence Legal aid Family law UK criminal justice Kenneth Clarke Charities Voluntary sector Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk
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