Student
moans and the quarterlife crisis
Released on
= August 23, 2005, 2:38 am
Press Release
Author = Rachel Lane
Industry = Education
Press Release
Summary = Graduates hit by hard reality after fall from high expectations
at university
Press Release
Body = It’s that time of year again when global issues take
second place in the British media, to make space for the great ‘A’
level debate. Packed with case studies of “Laura achieved
nine A grades and was still rejected from her first choice”,
you have to wonder how long students can maintain the will to study.
It’s not just the fact that companies and newspapers are debating
whether students are actually getting more stupid (‘A’
levels are the new GCSEs apparently), students are debating themselves
whether they are getting more stupid by even considering going to
university in the first place.
Lazy British
journalists are still reciting that the average graduate starting
salary is still around £25,000. At Cashzilla, we’re
not entirely sure where they get this figure as most graduates start
well below this – sometime as low as £12,000. that’s
not much money at all when you owe more that that in student debt.
But still as
unimaginative schools and parents coax their kids into three (or
more) years of vacant academia, it takes a gutsy 18 year old to
take a long term approach to what they may wish to do with their
life.
It is true that
there will always be careers that demand a university education,
but many young people get pushed on to the higher education conveyer
belt, without any idea of what they’re doing there. If there
was a booming graduate jobs market at the end of the production
market – vacant graduates would be fine.
But there are
real concerns about how crowded the universities are becoming and
how students are managing their finances. It is a phenomenal burden
to allow students to borrow such significant amount of money and
then watch them struggle for employment upon graduation. Even when
they get a job, many find it doesn’t meet the
high expectations pumped into them at university. No wonder the
“quarter life crisis” has become a lifestyle segment.
If you are a
student, graduate or university virgin, you must read Damian Barr’s
article “Crying on the inside” from Times Online (
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8123-1093294,00.html ),
it’s a superb summary of life as a British twenty-something.
On a slightly more practical, but just as constructive note, there
is an abundance of advice and support available on the internet.
Support for learning is a superb site ( http://www.support4learning.org.uk/money/index.htm
) and moneynet offers an excellent student finance guide (
http://www.moneynet.co.uk/student-finance-guide/index.shtml ), but
don’t get distracted by searching for additional loans and
credit cards!
By all means
go to university and have lots of fun, but bear in mind that the
graduate market is hugely competitive … and again …
t h e g r a d u a t e m a r k e t i s h u g e l y c o m p e t i
t i v e. We would rather see young people take some time out to
work, travel and gain experience before embarking on a hedonistic
journey of sex, drugs and rock and roll. Yes you have the right
to an education, but remember that education does not always lead
to freedom, especially
with the current price of a degree.
Resources:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,13809-1101541,00.html
About Rachel:
Rachel writes
for the personal finance blog Cashzilla.
Rachel lives in Edinburgh (currently over-run with tourists) with
Cat, blonde Andy and brunette Andy.
Web Site = http://www.cashzilla.co.uk/
Contact Details
= Rachel Lane
rachel@positiveinterest.com
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