severnside gull
Well-known member
If you sign up for a three year degree in sports management it will cost you .......................................................NOTHING
Dependant on your parents' income, you will receive a grant to live on. It will cost you .........................................NOTHING
If after you complete your degree you obtain employment and earn less than around £20,000 per annum you will repay ....................................NOTHING
If you were to move abroad you would repay ................................................NOTHING
Repayment effectively comes in the form that earnings over £20K per annum will attract an additional level of tax but it is still much cheaper than any form of loan and you will (reasonably speaking) be earning substantially more BECAUSE you have a degree so it isn't a bad trade-off.
If you earn mega bucks (unlikely off the back of a sports degree tbh) throughout your working life you would theoretically pay back more than you "borrowed" to pay for your degree BUT no matter whether you have paid back some money or no money, after 30 years your debt is written off.
I work with young people studying for leisure industry vocational qualifications. Most starting their studies next year will eventually pay back (by my best calculation) less than a third of the total amount they theoretically "owe" and that over their whole working life. Those who get reasonably well paid (over £20Kpa) jobs immediately after completing their degree will be repaying LESS than a student who has completed their degree and gained employment in the last five years.
You will gain intellectually and socially from studying for a higher qualification. With the alternative of dossing on the dole queue because there are no jobs for young people without advanced qualifications there are no down sides. JUST DO IT!
The Government have failed singularly to explain the real facts about the real costs of obtaining a higher education and I suspect that is because it is still cheaper for them to allow young people to stultify on the dole than for them to study towards personal betterment - unless of course they come from a class and background where the cost of education is irrelevant.
Dependant on your parents' income, you will receive a grant to live on. It will cost you .........................................NOTHING
If after you complete your degree you obtain employment and earn less than around £20,000 per annum you will repay ....................................NOTHING
If you were to move abroad you would repay ................................................NOTHING
Repayment effectively comes in the form that earnings over £20K per annum will attract an additional level of tax but it is still much cheaper than any form of loan and you will (reasonably speaking) be earning substantially more BECAUSE you have a degree so it isn't a bad trade-off.
If you earn mega bucks (unlikely off the back of a sports degree tbh) throughout your working life you would theoretically pay back more than you "borrowed" to pay for your degree BUT no matter whether you have paid back some money or no money, after 30 years your debt is written off.
I work with young people studying for leisure industry vocational qualifications. Most starting their studies next year will eventually pay back (by my best calculation) less than a third of the total amount they theoretically "owe" and that over their whole working life. Those who get reasonably well paid (over £20Kpa) jobs immediately after completing their degree will be repaying LESS than a student who has completed their degree and gained employment in the last five years.
You will gain intellectually and socially from studying for a higher qualification. With the alternative of dossing on the dole queue because there are no jobs for young people without advanced qualifications there are no down sides. JUST DO IT!
The Government have failed singularly to explain the real facts about the real costs of obtaining a higher education and I suspect that is because it is still cheaper for them to allow young people to stultify on the dole than for them to study towards personal betterment - unless of course they come from a class and background where the cost of education is irrelevant.