Government policy towards financial support for students means that students increasingly have to bear the costs of their education, often through acquiring significant student debt. This policy is largely justified with reference to the private benefits (through enhanced life-time earnings) that university graduates can expect to enjoy. Using evidence from a qualitative study of 49 students, this paper analyses the extent to which students are engaged in a process of rational weighing-up of the costs and benefits of higher education as implied by the policy stance. It also explores their interpretation of their financial position and Government policy towards them. It argues that students are very poorly informed about both the costs and b...
Research among prospective UK undergraduates in 2002 found that some students, especially from low s...
The meanings that college students make of their student debt were explored through the use of a sur...
Student debt is currently a relevant topic in the UK, especially in light of recent changes to the c...
Student loans have become a cornerstone of democratized access to higher education. This dissertatio...
This journalistic piece investigates the impact that student loan debt has on recent college graduat...
The findings from a longitudinal study of the financial circumstances of University of Brighton unde...
This article seeks to explore the ways in which the current financial regime for supporting students...
Student loans comprise the primary source of financial aid funding for higher education. But how muc...
Politicians regularly cite an expected individual economic gain (the 'graduate premium') as a justif...
As of September 2012, the undergraduate tuition fee cap at English universities was raised from £337...
The swirl of concerns about and criticisms of the cost of higher education and the debt burdens take...
The rapid worldwide growth in higher education undergraduate enrollments since around 1990 has meant...
Recent changes in higher education financing policies in England have led to more students funding t...
This qualitative study explores the perceptions of value added to the lives of graduates who borrowe...
The research paper examines what students believe and understand about student loans and financial l...
Research among prospective UK undergraduates in 2002 found that some students, especially from low s...
The meanings that college students make of their student debt were explored through the use of a sur...
Student debt is currently a relevant topic in the UK, especially in light of recent changes to the c...
Student loans have become a cornerstone of democratized access to higher education. This dissertatio...
This journalistic piece investigates the impact that student loan debt has on recent college graduat...
The findings from a longitudinal study of the financial circumstances of University of Brighton unde...
This article seeks to explore the ways in which the current financial regime for supporting students...
Student loans comprise the primary source of financial aid funding for higher education. But how muc...
Politicians regularly cite an expected individual economic gain (the 'graduate premium') as a justif...
As of September 2012, the undergraduate tuition fee cap at English universities was raised from £337...
The swirl of concerns about and criticisms of the cost of higher education and the debt burdens take...
The rapid worldwide growth in higher education undergraduate enrollments since around 1990 has meant...
Recent changes in higher education financing policies in England have led to more students funding t...
This qualitative study explores the perceptions of value added to the lives of graduates who borrowe...
The research paper examines what students believe and understand about student loans and financial l...
Research among prospective UK undergraduates in 2002 found that some students, especially from low s...
The meanings that college students make of their student debt were explored through the use of a sur...
Student debt is currently a relevant topic in the UK, especially in light of recent changes to the c...