I parlamentari richiedono sovvenzioni per la manutenzione degli studenti e suggeriscono “reddito minimo” per gli studenti uni in difficoltà

    https://www.lbc.co.uk/politics/uk-politics/mp-call-for-student-maintenance-grants-minimum-income/

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    17 commenti

    1. WearyBearMan on

      This sub will come with the usual take on students because they hate everything that isn’t miserable.

      Any smart country improves it’s educating and pushes it’s highest learners. A sign of societal decline is the anti intellectual push we see. Every other nation is doing this but Britain is in a state of sadism just like the US and we are selling off the country and our futures and too many of you are happy because you win your argument online.

      This needs to happen as well as initiatives into trade work, school learning at all levels.

    2. raininfordays on

      Sir, this is the UK. We don’t bother with the young and futures here.

    3. DamascusNuked on

      Build more houses. Ditch net zero.

      Housing & energy costs take a good chunk out of a student’s income

    4. Harrry-Otter on

      Student loan didn’t even cover accommodation back when I was a student. God knows how today’s manage it.

    5. Investing in the young?

      This is a terrible idea. Instead we should divert more money to “Asylum Seekers” and Pensioners

    6. FlyWayOrDaHighway on

      Honestly, as a very recent university graduate (graduated 3 days ago), it’s a good start to have these conversations, but I think neither of these are sustainable solutions.

      Which is not a bad thing, since obviously it’s just an initial call from an MP and they can work out a more sustainable way of managing this.

      But just because I went to university, doesn’t mean I deserve a higher minimum income over someone who didn’t, that fosters classism and a necessity of attending university. And that leads to my other point which is thet universities in the way they exist now are not sustainable.

      You already have too many graduates for the number of available subject-specific roles, and now you want to make university a necessity to be paid a minimum income, that won’t work out in the long run.

      What you need is the reintroduction of polytechnic institutes, which were made into universities in a push for ‘higher class’-ness, when polytechnics are actually great for teaching real working skills and preparing students for careers that are sustainable that the country wil always need.

    7. Wadarkhu on

      Terrible idea, I think we should redirect the potential funds for this straight into the pockets of retirees instead. ^(/s)

    8. I’m almost 40 and probably need to reskill but can’t afford to. This would help a lot more than just the 18-22 year olds

      As an aside, this would also level the playing field so that kids from poorer backgrounds can actually study and get *good* marks, instead of juggling multiple jobs and simply passing.

    9. Puzzleheaded-Key2212 on

      I remember the EMA thing back in college. It was something like £30 a week. I didn’t get it because apparently my parents were “high earners” or whatever.

      So kids from lower-income households got the £30 and I got nothing.

      It was a similar story at uni. No grant for me, just the standard loan. I lived at home and commuted in since it was only about 25 miles away.

      I’ve never understood why everything is based on parental income. Like with school trips. I only went on a couple of the abroad ones because my parents didn’t see the point in spending £500 to £1000 on them. Yet if your parents were on benefits, the whole thing would be covered for you. I only went on a France and Germany trip rather than the New York one, but we did eventually go as a family back in 2016

      As long as the funds are available to everyone i don’t see the issue. Always annoyed me that the kids of parents who don’t work got everything all paid for, yet my parents who worked full time and paid 40 percent taxes got naff all.

    10. AntiDynamo on

      I studied in Australia, and received Youth Allowance through Centrelink. Implementation (and Centrelink) issues aside, it had a massive impact on my ability to study as someone from a poorer background and who had to move for university. Though it was also available for young people searching for work or doing apprenticeships.

      If we want young adults in training then we need to support them, otherwise access to training depends a lot on your family wealth

    11. freemason6999 on

      Universities are becoming an outdated concept in the age of AI
      How we deliver education has to change. The tax payer can no longer subsidize these people.

    12. Wondering_Electron on

      The Tories, Reform and right leaning voters like the MAGA in the US would never support this.

      This is because this enables more people to receive higher education. The problem with this is that you’ll end up with a more educated and informed general electorate who tend to not vote for the Tories or Reform.

      Labour should push this through with their majority.

    13. Should depend on what you want to study.

      If you go to Uni to avoid having to work for another 3 years, then study Social Science, Gender Studies or some other worthless degree then you should take the hit on the loans.

    14. VelvetDreamers on

      I agree and I’m going to indulge in a little anecdote. Education was my salvation from a life time of entrenched poverty in the Roma community; without my education at university I’d be living in such privation and criminality that I’d be everything the Roma stereotype conveys.

      Education is the greatest social elevation in life. I’d go a lot further than this MP, I’d advocate for free university for all especially those languishing in poverty and the abolishing of student debt.

      I’d also stigmatise the enmity of communities who disdain higher education as “too white” or “too western.” The ignorance is astounding.

    15. Academic-Key2 on

      Uni is a harrowing experience for the poor and a 3 year stint to take drugs and party for the rich. 

      Most people I know who partied all through uni and dropped out ended up getting a job from daddy too. 

      That money would help the poorest of us actually survive the most broke years of their lives. 

    16. Soft_Camp_5620 on

      Why is it that university students have to take out a loan (with 3% interest + inflation) just to live, whereas an unemployed NEET gets money handed by the government. It’s hypocrisy, the British system seems to punish education and effort while incentivizing doing nothing.

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