Friends, Collaborating On Art Projects with other students. What i actually got. Was an online degree delivered in my bedroom. Hi, good evening. Tonight whod be a student in 2023 . Ahead of a level results, btecs and other exams in england, wales and Northern Ireland tomorrow, we devote our programme tonight to finding out whether the class of 2023 sixth formers and those doing degrees and graduating this summer are perhaps the unluckiest group of students for a generation. If you have a relevant experience, wherever you are in the country, then do whatsapp me on 07977 701980. If youre a student, youll know about the pretty tough time youve had over the last few years, with covid and teaching strikes disrupting your education, a Cost Of Living crisis, and when you graduate, leaving with about £45,000 of debt, which in many cases you will repay earlier and for longer. And yet despite all that, a record 320,00018 year olds appplied for uni last year, and most students will graduate as n
in the way they really could be. the government created degree apprenticeships in 2015 to give students practical experience while earning earning a qualification. at the time the minister for skills and said all apprenticeships are one of the most powerful motors of social mobility and productivity growth. but if there aren t enough course places and there is little focus on school leavers, as some have claimed, do they actually achieve that objective? crown, you get your a level results tomorrow, you are feeling confident and you have got plan b if it doesn t go according to plan but you don t want to go to university. what are you looking to pursue? i’m are you looking to pursue? i m lookin: are you looking to pursue? i“n looking towards an apprenticeship in the financial sector. i looked at university, might school made me apply to newcastle and i got in but it isn t as attractive as it used to
who are in a bad situation. we ll hear more who are in a bad situation. we ll hear more from who are in a bad situation. we ll hear more from you. who are in a bad situation. we ll hear more from you. thank i who are in a bad situation. we ll hear more from you. thank you | who are in a bad situation. we ll hear more from you. thank you for being here. ok, let s talk about the state of university finances, because that impacts current students, those who are due to start uni this autumn, staff and the future of the sector, and that will feed into a conversation about the industrial action already mentioned, by academics and university staff over pay and conditions which has led to, it s estimated, around 13,000 students not graduating with a degree not yet. to put that into some sort of context, though 570,00 students are set to graduate this summer. it is true to say that some universities really are in financial trouble. the number running a deficit has gone up dramatically,
this summer, despite the marking boycott. for a level students in england, wales and northern irleand, your results tomorrow will be back to pre covid 2019 grades, after those teacher assessed grades during the pandemic inflated results last summer and the one before. according to england s education secretary, that means around 100,000 fewer a and a grades this year. so, how are some of our guests here tonight feeling about all of that? welcome, all of you. jayden, you get your a level results tomorrow, how are you feeling? i’m your a-level results tomorrow, how are you feeling? your a-level results tomorrow, how are you feeling? i m feeling nervous about it. are you feeling? i m feeling nervous about it- it s are you feeling? i m feeling nervous about it. it s mostly are you feeling? i m feeling nervous about it. it s mostly about are you feeling? i m feeling nervous about it. it s mostly about the - about it. it s mostly about the uncertainty. i ve put in quite a lot of wo
indexation or increase in fees in ten years, so the real resources shrinking and shrinking. it ten years, so the real resources shrinking and shrinking.- ten years, so the real resources shrinking and shrinking. it was a revious shrinking and shrinking. it was a previous labour shrinking and shrinking. it was a previous labour government i shrinking and shrinking. it was al previous labour government that introduced fees, and you raise the cap. let me bring in apsana begum from labour. 0bviously, sir keir starmer has scrapped its previous pledge to get rid of tuition fees. are you cross about that? the first thin i are you cross about that? the first thing i want are you cross about that? the first thing i want to are you cross about that? the first thing i want to respond are you cross about that? the first thing i want to respond to - are you cross about that? the first thing i want to respond to is i are you cross about that? the first thing i want to respond to is what l thi