Not-That-Bright
Andrew Quah
Of course there is the notion that we are "investing in our future", I just think some people want way too much invested in them for the ammount of work they're willing to actually do.
oh yeah. Forgot about that bit of debt for a minute thereXayma said:LadyBec so you are on a full fee place? If you are on a HECS place the taxpayer is still footing a large bill.
So much support? Given what I have read elsewhere, beyond the basic welfare payments (and hecs, I guess) that support is largely what one provides for themselves.Not-That-Bright said:No of course not, but given the current level of support for people in university perhaps they should stand on their own feet just a little bit more, eh?
I just don't think it's fair that someone who goes to uni and does a little study combined with some basic assignments (largely for their own benefit) get so much support... while people who go out into the workforce and make a living for themselves get taxed to pay for it.
hmm is it hard to get a tutoring job? where do you advertise and all?addymac said:In a share house rent will range from $80 to $140. I'd say optimal at about $110. Assuming cheap eats and/or group cooking $50 a week should cover food, say another $50 to cover entertainment, incidentals etc and you're only looking at $210pw expenses.
Easily covered by YA+RA and some cash in hand tutoring. Easily covered by a part-time job doing about 20 hours or less a week.
I'm convinced that NUS think that students (another way of saying themselves and their friends) shouldn't have to work, which quite frankly is wrong.
I live in UTS Housing. College in Sydney is much more expensive, you pay for the prestige and social structure as well as the roof above your head. You won't find anything much cheaper close to UTS City campus. $40 is because I can't have a phone connection in my room to get dialup so I have to use unwired internet. $60 for phone is because I have to use my mobile to make calls for my journalism stories.... if I don't ring people up to get interviews for stories, then I FAIL so it is pretty essential. I wish people didn't put journalism students on hold so damn often though, that is really annoying.Rorix said:I suggest that the problem is with the MONEY MANAGEMENT.
How can you have a phone bill of $60 a month (shit, what you need a phone for?) and a internet bill of $40 a month (BUT A CABLE CONNECTION IS A NECESSITY) and live in a place with ridiculously high rent for your financial circumstances (move into college or something) AND save for an overseas trip and claim you can't afford uni?
oh oh oh well putbraindrainedAsh said:Its like banging your head against a brick wall sometimes here lol.
I know, but it costs like 30 bucks for the stupid card. I should get one though, even if only to use for the train.braindrainedAsh said:Hey Bec I didn't know you were in Albury.... it shouldn't cost $90 each way for the train, you need to get a student travel concession thing from your uni and then it is only $45... The bus is $55.... how much do the bus and train home suck haha I always get stuck next to weirdos doing the Melb-Syd drug run who want to tell you their life story for 9 hours. And countrylink is ALWAYS late! I haven't been home for about 5 months now, going home next week my mum is nagging me haha. Plus I need to work at the family business.... I bet you know of Sweethearts? Shite, you have no car in Alb? That must suck big time there is NO public transport eh! When I am home I scab my parent's car all the time lol. Where are you at, CSU Albury or Thurgoona, or La Trobe?
Any non essentials (anything besides rent and food) and costs relating to uni you should either :neo_o the god of sex said:What we have learnt today :
1) Students have no excuse for starving. While Centrelink doesn't cover uni fees or textbooks (why should they) they cover the essential costs of living : food (if you live reasonably and dont buy prime cuts of meat) and rent.
2) The elemination of union fees will aid poor students in attending university, since they can't afford to eat let alone pay union fees.
3) Students who can't afford textbooks etc should defer for a year, as should students who can't qualify for centrelink (though it's very easy) but want to study away from home. They should work and earn the minimum rate to get Centrelink. If they live in the country they should move to the city - as if they are prudent they will save some money for textbooks next year and earn more than the minimum rate anyway after rent.
4) Students can potentially earn huge amounts of money since tutoring and other cash in hand activities don't reduce their earnings.
It costs 30 for the card? That sucks! The train really sucks. One day in the middle of summer I was on it going to Sydney and the air con broke, and it was a 40 degree day.... even hotter in the carriages because the windows don't open... plus because of the heat they were worried that the tracks might bend so they had to go extra slow.... it took 12 HOURS to get from Albury to Sydney, with NO AIR CON!!!!! I would be waiting for the doors to open at the stations just to get some fresh air. Plus there was a lady with really bad BO in front of me and every time she lifted her arms.... ugh! It sucked so much, it would have been even worse for the people who had come all the way from Melbourne. It is never on time, drives me crazy. I read something once that 80% of countrylink's services run more than half an hour late or something lol. I think the bus is slightly better, but you don't get to walk around and there are weirdos on the bus a lot as well. Plus you only get one stop on the bus at Canberra....LadyBec said:I know, but it costs like 30 bucks for the stupid card. I should get one though, even if only to use for the train.
omg how LONG is the train though. its like...forever. and there're always icky unclean people hanging around, and the stupid thing hasn't been on time ever.
Good old sweethearts. I have a lotta feeling for that place..... that and the bended, I like it there too. Plus live bands = happy Bec
Having no car is the worst though, so I like hardly ever go anywhere unless I can scab a ride of a friend, and the busses are so crap.
Im at good old la trobe. yey for it. (not really, im praying for a transfer asap )
Getting a Bachelor of Arts, or Communications, will not really help too many people to break the 'poverty cycle'. If they're really trying to get out of poverty you'd think they'd be apply to tafe to do an apprenticeship and actually earn some money while they learn.education is the only way to break the poverty cycle
So because you managed to sit through school and get a 65 uai (minimum) to get into uni the people out there working and paying taxes should do even more than they currently do to help you.the conflict as to whether education is a right (for those that have earnt tertiary education by studying hard) or a priviledge.
Since I also do Communications I guess my 'personal attack' on you was one aimed at myself also...May I just ask, have I ever personally attacked you in this thread? I think the answer is no.
Well you keep using yourself as an example, so sometimes my counter to that example may include some references which you think are specific to you, but I'm really just trying to counter your entire concept.You keep on using me as an example, when I am simply talking about how I believe that student poverty is a real problem, not for me personally, but for other people. Read what I am saying instead of getting all bitter and twisted. I don't need more money I am happy!!!! Other people need help.
I don't care what you study.if I were studying medicine would you have so many issues with me? Someone has to be a journalist- the media is essential to maintaining democracy.
I was simply pointing out the comparison, people who do nothing complaining to get more money from people doing alot doesn't make sense to me.And don't talk about people being lazy... for the past year and a half I have been working 43 hour weeks to earn enough to get on youth allowance plus studying.... I made sacrifices to get to the good situation where I am now.
Umm... such as? "I didn't get to hang out with my friends and watch movies", doesn't exactly cut it as a sacrafice.I made sacrifices to get to the good situation where I am now.
Well he definately worked hard, good for him!Every dollar our family has made has come from my fathers hands beating down on pizza dough... I know what hard work is, he has made so many pizzas that he has injured his wrists.
Yes... there are hard situations.But I also know for some people it is considerably harder, and there are situations where people can't find work
She could of delayed uni for a year, lived with her parents and worked a job close to where-ever, saved up her money then gone to uni with YA. I have a hard time believing there's that big a problem finding work in albury since there are alot of nursing homes there.take Bec for instance... I don't think I would be able to find a job in Albury Wodonga easily, even now after working heaps in Sydney, and even though I have heaps of connections in Albury.... it is EXTREMELY hard to find part time work there
Bullshit they will, if they really want to "break the poverty cycle" work in a trade and do some hard work - you get paid while you're studying + you'll most definately get a job.But even if someone from a poor community gets Bachelor of Communications (I can't believe you have stooped to bashing certain types of degrees) they will have better job prospects and more chance of breaking their family's poverty cycle than someone who has no post secondary education
Because her mum is misinformed about the programs in place for people in rural communities, YA + RA, etc. The information is out there, I guess it's harder living in a rural community to access it (tho i'm sure they could get the internet).One of my mum's friends is quite poor and they live on a property in rural Victoria (really really rural...). I heard her tell her daughter, who is quite smart, a few months ago when the daughter was saying she would like to study law "oh don't be silly you could never afford to go to university its far too expensive for us to afford"... this is part of the problem in breaking the poverty cycle.
ELITIST? Dispite the fact that we have more people in university now than ever!I think that TERTIARY (meaning TAFE and uni) study is becoming more and more elitist in this country. TAFE fees were increased last year, which is another imposition on people's motivation to study.
- It's very hard to give a tax cut to the poor, as they really pay barely any taxes at all, it's much easier to give a tax cut to the rich as they're already paying more. Giving tax cuts to the rich is also an economic incentive, as opposed to giving tax cuts to the poor which is rather bad for the overall economy.Perhaps the Howard government shouldn't be giving tax cuts to the rich and should be investing more money in education, because the state of education (public schools, tertiary institutions) has slid downwards under a Liberal government.
I think you'll find a much higher % of students go on to college in america than in australiaEducation is one of the most important things you can equip a society with, and it saddens me that it seems to be becoming more and more out of reach for some people. In the USA the way their colleges work make it really hard for people to get an education, and look what it is doing over there.
I'd say you've misinterpreted what you read, and are simply ignorant to believe american universities are 'dumber' than Australian ones."In Australia, they expect you to be analytical in your essays, not like at home. You have to do lots of research for your papers, and your professors will expect you to have analyzed the material rather than just written down what it is about. We weren't joking when we said uni was a lot tougher here."
Do you really want a situation where everyone goes to uni just for the hell of it because it's alot easier than working?Like, WTF! Do we really want Australia's education system going down the elitist path, where people can get college degrees without even thinking just because their parents are rich?
it is. trust me, i've tried. a lot.braindrainedAsh said:take Bec for instance... I don't think I would be able to find a job in Albury Wodonga easily, even now after working heaps in Sydney, and even though I have heaps of connections in Albury.... it is EXTREMELY hard to find part time work there
yes I could have, but seeing as how i spen all of my time after the HSC trying to get a job and hadn't getten one by the time I had to accept my uni offer, I decided that I would be better of in the long run to go this year with the support of my parents.Not-That-Bright said:She could of delayed uni for a year, lived with her parents and worked a job close to where-ever, saved up her money then gone to uni with YA. I have a hard time believing there's that big a problem finding work in albury since there are alot of nursing homes there.