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Students face tuition fees rising to £9,000

The Dragon Master

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Universities in England will be able to charge tuition fees of up to £9,000 per year from 2012, as the government transfers much of the cost of courses from the state to students.



Fees will rise to £6,000, with an upper tier of £9,000 if universities ensure access for poorer students.



Universities Minister David Willetts said this was a progressive reform.



Labour's Gareth Thomas said the fee hike represented a tragedy for a whole generation of young people.



But Mr Willetts said the fees package would put universities' finance on a sustainable footing with extra freedoms and less bureaucracy.



He argued this would bring greater choice for students with a stronger focus on high quality teaching.



The National Union of Students dubbed the plan, which will mean almost a threefold increase, an outrage.



The announcement sparked an occupation of an administration building by students at Goldsmiths, University of London.



Students unfurled banners and called for other universities to join the protest.



Much of the proposed fee rise, up from the current £3,290 per year, will replace funding cut from universities in last month's Spending Review.



This will mean that many courses, particularly in arts and humanities, will almost entirely depend on income from students' fees.



Full story: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-11677862
 
There are loans that students can get and don't have to pay back until they start earning so much money a year, but it's still unfair as students are going to be in more debt then if the fee's stay as they are.
 
The Dragon Master said:
There are loans that students can get and don't have to pay back until they start earning so much money a year, but it's still unfair as students are going to be in more debt then if the fee's stay as they are.



I'm not from the UK, but I think even in the US some colleges and university's have a sort of loan program that students can partake in, and like DM said, they don't have to pay back until they start up with their own jobs and start earning so much, but I agree that is still unfair. I'm not sure how much that is in US currency, but those prices do sound pretty ridiculous.
 
£9'000 is roughly about $14'500. It is a lot of money and students in England are fortunate to have the loan but, for example, I'm currently at University and my fee's are about £3'500 ($5'900) but after a 3 year course it will take me at least 10 to 20 years for the debt to be paid of (I have other loans from the government to help me live to pay off). Granted they only take a ridiculously small amount out of your salary, but that's a long time to have debt stuck over your head. One good thing about it is, that we only pay back what we borrowed, there's no interest at all.
 
The Dragon Master said:
£9'000 is roughly about $14'500. It is a lot of money and students in England are fortunate to have the loan but, for example, I'm currently at University and my fee's are about £3'500 ($5'900) but after a 3 year course it will take me at least 10 to 20 years for the debt to be paid of (I have other loans from the government to help me live to pay off). Granted they only take a ridiculously small amount out of your salary, but that's a long time to have debt stuck over your head. One good thing about it is, that we only pay back what we borrowed, there's no interest at all.



That does sound like it would suck that they only take a small amount out of your paycheck from your job. I know I for one would be pissed that they didn't take out more than that. Especialy when you have a job where you're making a lot of money.
 
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