As of September 2012, the undergraduate tuition fee cap at English universities was raised from £3375 to £9000 per annum. This article explores the rationales underpinning prospective students' decision whether or not to apply to higher education following the fee increase, specifically, how this decision is influenced by perceptions of study-related debt and expected earnings. The article draws on data obtained from prospective undergraduates in year 13 and conceptualises their decision-making using the notion of ‘bounded rationality’. The data show that participant's primary response to the fee increase and associated study-related debt is that ‘there is no point worrying’. This is because in the short term, a higher education degree is c...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
Politicians regularly cite an expected individual economic gain (the 'graduate premium') as a justif...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
This article critically examines how undergraduate students in a red brick university in the North o...
Individual economic gains are regarded as a major rationale for higher private contributions to the ...
The funding of students in UK Higher Education (HE) has undergone radical reform over the past two d...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
Politicians regularly cite an expected individual economic gain (the 'graduate premium') as a justif...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
The new student funding regime introduced by the 2004 Higher Education Act in England is predicated ...
This article critically examines how undergraduate students in a red brick university in the North o...
Individual economic gains are regarded as a major rationale for higher private contributions to the ...
The funding of students in UK Higher Education (HE) has undergone radical reform over the past two d...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...
Concerns over the impact of debt on participation in higher education (HE) have dominated much of th...