Oxford chancellor's call for higher fees is at odds with general public's view, says 圖朸厙
30 September 2008
圖朸厙 today rejected the call from Oxford University chancellor, Lord Patten, to relax the current 瞿3,000-a-year cap on university tuition fees.
Responding to Lord Patten's speech at the Headmasters' and Headmistresses' Conference (HMC) in central London, 圖朸厙 general secretary, Sally Hunt, said: 'Lord Patten's view that parents should embrace the removal of the university tuition fee cap is not one shared by the general public. A recent YouGov poll revealed that, as well as opposing any increase in fees, the majority of people in Britain back a university funding system that is at no cost to the student or their family.
'圖朸厙 believes we need a fair system where every potential student has the opportunity to maximise their potential, irrespective of how much their parents may be willing to pay or what they can actually afford. Increasing fees or the other financial barriers that so many students and parents come up against when considering university is certainly not the way to deliver such a system.'
Click here for more information on the YouGov poll on British attitudes to university funding
'圖朸厙 believes we need a fair system where every potential student has the opportunity to maximise their potential, irrespective of how much their parents may be willing to pay or what they can actually afford. Increasing fees or the other financial barriers that so many students and parents come up against when considering university is certainly not the way to deliver such a system.'
Click here for more information on the YouGov poll on British attitudes to university funding
- PrintPrint this page
- Share
Comments