Dramatic lift in full-fee uni students

Dramatic lift in full-fee uni students
By David Rood
Higher education reporter
February 24, 2005
Article from the Melbourne Age, Australia
The number of Victorians paying for a university degree has soared, with more than half the students starting law at Melbourne University this year enrolling to pay full fees.

A big change from the eighties when I was a student and the concept of paying full fees for education was a relic of a bygone era, something that happens in far away places, like the USA.
How will middle class students like myself afford an education in the future? In the past university places were heavily subsidised. But now federal grants to universities have been cut back.
What effect will this have on the demographics of students? Will there be less students from low income/ middle class backgrounds?

  • Fee-paying students will also fill 48 per cent of first-year places in optometry and 37 per cent in dentistry when classes begin at Melbourne on Monday.

    The university has experienced an overall 38 per cent jump in domestic fee-paying commencing students, who will make up 8 per cent of total first-year undergraduate enrolments. Monash University has experienced a 12 per cent increase over last year.

    The universities have blamed decreasing Federal Government funding for their increasing reliance on revenue from fee-paying students.

    Under the Howard Government’s higher education changes, the maximum quota of fee-paying students has risen from 25 to 35 per cent of total enrolments in any course. Universities can enrol higher percentages of fee-paying students in individual years, provided the 35 per cent is not exceeded across an entire course.
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    Students can obtain a full-fee place with marks below the entry score for a Commonwealth or HECS place. The entry score for a HECS law place at Melbourne was 99.4, while the fee-paying score was 96.

    Opposition education spokeswoman Jenny Macklin said the student figures made a mockery of the Government’s claims that no more than 35 per cent of students would pay full fees.

    “People who can pay $96,000 to study law at Melbourne University, now have more than twice the chance of getting in as those who don’t have the money to pay full fees,” she said.

    HECS students will pay $32,000 for a four-year law degree.

    Ms Macklin said access to a university places should be based on academic merit, not bank balances. She warned that the Government could remove the limit on full-fee places when it assumed control of the Senate in July, leaving some courses with 100 per cent fee-paying students.

    The Government’s education changes also allowed universities a 10 per cent quota of fee-paying domestic medical students from this year. Monash University has filled its 10 per cent quota, with Melbourne to reach the quota following its mid-year intake of students.

    A fee-based medical degree costs $160,000 at Monash and $200,000 at Melbourne.

    Law remains the most popular fee-paying degree, with 35 per cent of Monash commencing students paying full fees. Full-fee students also comprise 25 per cent of first-year enrolments in pharmacy at Monash.

    The figures are based on preliminary or “year to date” data.

    The senior vice-principal at Melbourne University, Ian Marshman, said students were making informed decisions about their courses and utilising the new deferred loan scheme for fee places.

    Mr Marshman attributed the increase in fee-paying students to three factors: the university introducing minimum entry scores for fee places, students in combined degrees splitting their enrolment between HECS and fee places and guaranteed transfer from fee places to Commonwealth-funded places for students with marks averaging at least 75 per cent. “Some of our very best students are in fee-based places, opening up government-supported places for other students,” he said.

    Mr Marshman said Melbourne was ahead of its target of $20 million from domestic full-fee students.

    A spokesman for federal Education Minister Brendan Nelson said fee-paying students represented about 2 per cent of the total student population. “These places are only taken up after all HECS places are filled by students,” he said. “Every single one of those full fee payers is paying their own way, often freeing up a HECS place that they otherwise would have been eligible for in another course.”

    The spokesman ruled out any increase to the 35 per cent quota of fee-paying students.

    At Deakin University, full fees will be paid this year by 9 per cent of law students, 6.5 per cent of commerce students and almost 3 per cent of those in primary teaching. An RMIT University spokeswoman said it was too early to provide figures on the number of full-fee-paying students for 2005. But only a small increase was expected. Swinburne University is offering full-fee places for the first time, while La Trobe does not take domestic fee-paying students.

  • Finnished Harry Potter and the Order of the Pheonix

    Well, I have finally finnished the last of the Harry Potter books. It was a ripper of a book.
    Aside from being much longer, it was much darker, and from my point of view more enjoyable.

    I can’t wait until the sixth book Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince is out on July 16th 2005, just three days after my thirty seventh birthday.

    They have finnished filming on the fourth Harry Potter film and the sixth book has been written. So there should be two Harry Potter events this year

    – The release of the sixth bookHarry Potter and the Half Blood Prince on July 16th 2005
    – The release of the fourth book as a film in ?????

    Harry Potter websites
    – http://www.mugglenet.com/
    – http://www.scholastic.com/harrypotter
    – http://www.hp-lexicon.org/

    Finished Harry Potter Book 4

    Well, I have finally finished Book 4 of the Harry Potter saga, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

    For a change I thought I would read Book Five, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoeonix.

    Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

    The first book is the best so far, because it was about Harry’s first experiences with magic and like all things for the first time, it is wonderful.
    But Book Four was great, much darker, the death of a character, conspiracies, evil reborn.
    By the sound of it, book five will be more of the same.
    At 870 pages, it will take a tad longer then the first book which was only 223 pages.

    Book 1 – 223 Pages
    Book 2 – 251 Pages
    Book 3 – 317 Pages
    Book 4 – 636 Pages
    Book 5 – 870 Pages
    Book 6 – ??? Pages – July 2005
    Book 7 – ??? Pages – T.B.A

    Although these books are aimed at children, the page count and the material discussed are very adualt by the time we get to book four.

    Blogging Background Readings

    A Blog is a Web Diary. Blogging is the process of writing on a web diary.

    Below are some background readings on the technology and principles behind bloggin

    A Beginner’s Guide to TrackBack
    Very useful article by the creators of Moveable Type on Tracebacks

    Summary of Pingback


    The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!)
    This article is for programmers. It discusses the issues associated with using non English languages, particullary CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)

    Bad Habbits

    Lately I have been getting in the habbit of staying up very late. The last three days I went to sleep at 5am, 4am, 4:10am !
    That is bad enough, but I have been getting up at noon. So most of the day is gone.
    So I have decided to go back to my old working habbits.
    In bed by Midnight and up at 7 am

    Today is the changeover day. The best strategy would have been to get about three hours of sleep and get up. But I knew I would oversleep.
    So I decided not to sleep on Sunday night.

    Went for a bike ride at 5am to get some coke. For some strange reason I was feeling sleepy!
    Being up at that hour reminded me of home. You could see the sun would rise in the next hour or so. The air was fresh and the early shift workers were up and driving to work. I love that time of day.

    Kit Kat Craze in Japan

    BBC Report on Kit Kat Craze in Japan

    When I was growing up one of my favorite lollies (candy) was a Kit Kat

    Japan snaps up ‘lucky’ Kit Kats

    Kit Kat is a best-selling sweet around the world
    Students in Japan have reportedly caused sales of Kit Kat bars to soar, by adopting them as lucky charms.
    The name of the chocolate bar resembles a Japanese expression – “kitto katsu” – used by students to wish each other luck before exams.
    The phrase has been translated roughly as: “I hope you will win.”
    “We’re finding that parents are buying them for their children for exam days,” Yuko Iwasaki, a spokesman for Nestle Japan, told Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper. “But also some determined pupils are buying Kit Kats for themselves as a sort of reminder that they are really going to give these exams their best shot,” he added.

    Like you need an excuse to eat chocolate.
    I hear Soju and galbi are lucky too :-). Perhaps I should eat and drink more ?

    Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

    Well, have just finnished reading the third Harry Potter book, The Prisoner of Azkaban, I enjoyed it very much.
    The film, which I had just watched a few days ago was very enjoyable, but so many of the little details that make the Potter world what it is were cut from the film. The book fleshes out the story, making it that much richer.
    I loved the book very much. The feelings I got from reading the book reminded me of when I first read the Lord of the Rings. Potter (the book, not the character) even smells the same.

    So, what now? Book five beckons.

    Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

    Still in a pre-Google world

    Found this why surfing the web. An excellent illustration on how not to find information.

    Complete Tosh, by Neil McIntosh: Still in a pre-Google world
    Still in a pre-Google world

    Here’s an interesting excerpt from a book by Peter Hyman, former advisor and chief speechwriter to Tony Blair. It’s 2003, and they’re working on Blair’s conference speech, to be delivered the next day. Hyman’s leaving Blair’s suite when Tony says…

    “Can you find me a quote? There’s this beautiful saying from the Bible, Proverbs, I think, twenty-something, that says exactly what we want to say in this speech. I want to use it at the end. “It’s something like, ‘If we faint in the day of struggle, we have little strength.'”

    I leave the room and go back to my bedroom to look for the obligatory hotel Bible. I open the bedside drawers. No Bible. I look in the cupboard under the television. It’s a mini-bar. Is this the only hotel room in Britain without a Bible? Is this yet another symbol of the decline in values?

    Found it. It was in a clothes drawer.

    I look for the quote and find Tony is almost spot on. It’s Proverbs 24:10. I return to his room. The security man on the door lets me in with a key. I tell Tony the good news. “If we faint when there’s trouble, then we have little strength.” Tony says: “That’s the right quote, but there are more poetic versions. Have you looked at the King James Bible?”

    Where will I get a King James Bible at 10pm on a Monday? I phone the only person I know who will be working at this hour, the No 10 duty clerk, the heroic person on duty through the night. He calls me back within the hour: ‘If we faint in the day of adversity, our strength is small.’ I leave the quote on a piece of paper for Tony.”

    Maybe it’s just me being a geek, but to me this reads almost like something from a different age – the second world war, perhaps. Surely the instinct of most professionals, faced with the need to find the King James version of a quote, would be to hit Google with the approximate version? Indeed, search on what Blair gives him – proverbs If we faint in the day of struggle, we have little strength – and you get the exact quote at number one. Search on Proverbs 24:10 and you get the full thou and thy King James version at number four.

    I bet they have Google in the West Wing.