quinta-feira, 3 de julho de 2014

Universidade em crise

UNIVERSITY STUDENTS ON GRADUATION DAY UK

'Students need a reality check – university is not school'

Students must take responsibility for their own learning, irrespective of how many 'contact hours' they have, argues lecturer Joanna Williams

Academics, students and parents need to reassess the concept of value in relation to HE Photo: Alamy
With an average price tag just shy of £27,000, a degree from an English university doesn’t come cheap nowadays. Increases in tuition fees have triggered hand-wringing over the value of higher education.
Debates continue as to whether the value of a degree should be measured in potential future earnings or the immediacy of the student experience. Meanwhile, there is a growing consensus that students do not think they are getting value for money.
The results of a survey conducted last month by the Higher Education Policy Institute and the Higher Education Academy suggest one-third of students feel they are receiving poor, or very poor, value for money.
Which?, the consumer rights group familiar to many a confused shopper, finds students even more dissatisfied. Their recently published report claims nearly half of all students do not think their degree is worth the money.
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