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pour des éts innovants et coopératifs |
Royaume-Uni : 35% des élèves de 11 ans ne savent pas lire
L’uniforme
discriminatoire
En imposant un fournisseur
unique pour l’achat de l’uniforme, les écoles pratiquent une discrimination
à l’encontre des élèves pauvres.
Un
demi-million de «sans-logement» en Grande-Bretagne
A
Londres, un enfant sur deux sous le seuil de pauvreté
Un demi-million d'enfants britanniques travaillent "illégalement"
Plus
de 350 000 Britanniques ont quitté leur île en 2005
pour
jouir d'une vie meilleure
Les
jeunes Britanniques se voient vivre ailleurs
difficulté
d' acquérir un logement, hausse de la fiscalité et indigence
des services publics,
en particulier
les transports et le système de soins.
Les
étudiants paient plus mais reçoivent moins
Les
étudiants britanniques paient toujours plus cher leur inscription
à la faculté et disposent pourtant d’un nombre restreint
de cours.
De
plus en plus d’étudiantes se prostituent ou travaillent dans l’industrie
du sexe
pour
payer les frais d’inscription de leur université
France
:
Les
frais d'inscription à la fac dérapent
Selon une enquête
de l'Unef, 62 % des universités s'exposent à des recours
contentieux.
Beuark.
Ségolène
Royal rend hommage à la politique de Tony Blair.
"BAGUE
DE VIRGINITE" : Une
adolescente anglaise, fille d'un pasteur
évangélique, perd son procès en Haute Cour.
| Royaume-Uni
: La fac trop chère pour les pauvres
Le nombre d’élèves issus
de milieux défavorisés inscrits dans les universités
britanniques a chuté selon les chiffres publiés le 19 juillet
dernier par la Higher Education Statistics Agency.
Top-up fees stop poorer students going to university By Sarah Cassidy, Education Correspondent - The Independent
State school pupils, working-class youngsters and people from deprived backgrounds are losing out to more privileged candidates in the battle for university places, according to official figures published today. Ministers expressed disappointment at the figures, which showed the proportion of pupils from state schools going to university has dropped to its lowest level for three years. Drop-out rates have also risen and more young people are predicted to leave university with no qualification and to fail to find work, the data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (Hesa) show. Bill Rammell, the higher education minister, said: "We are disappointed that the percentages of young full-time students from disadvantaged backgrounds have not increased since last year." The publication came as the latest university application figures showed a 3.5 per cent drop, suggesting that young people had been put off going into higher education this autumn by the introduction of top-up fees. This meant that 17,184 fewer students applied to university than at the same date last year. Universities will be able to charge fees of up to £3,000 a year from September. The new fee regime has already provoked a rush of applications last year with 8.2 per cent more people applying to ensure they would escape the new charges. The Hesa figures show that 86.7 per cent of university places are now taken by state school pupils, a drop of 0.1 percentage points on the previous year. Just 28.2 per cent of young first-year degree students starting courses in 2004-05 came from working-class backgrounds, down from 28.6 per cent the previous year. State school pupils, working-class youngsters and people from deprived backgrounds are losing out to more privileged candidates in the battle for university places, according to official figures published today. Ministers expressed disappointment at the figures, which showed the proportion of pupils from state schools going to university has dropped to its lowest level for three years. Drop-out rates have also risen and more young people are predicted to leave university with no qualification and to fail to find work, the data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (Hesa) show. Bill Rammell, the higher education minister, said: "We are disappointed that the percentages of young full-time students from disadvantaged backgrounds have not increased since last year." The publication came as the latest university application figures showed a 3.5 per cent drop, suggesting that young people had been put off going into higher education this autumn by the introduction of top-up fees. This meant that 17,184 fewer students applied to university than at the same date last year. Universities will be able to charge fees of up to £3,000 a year from September. The new fee regime has already provoked a rush of applications last year with 8.2 per cent more people applying to ensure they would escape the new charges. The Hesa figures show that 86.7 per cent of university places are now taken by state school pupils, a drop of 0.1 percentage points on the previous year. Just 28.2 per cent of young first-year degree students starting courses in 2004-05 came from working-class backgrounds, down from 28.6 per cent the previous year.
The Big Question : Why are fewer students from poor backgrounds going to university ? By Sarah Cassidy, Education Correspondent - The Independent
Why is this an issue now? This week official figures revealed that the proportion of state-school pupils at university has fallen to its lowest level for three years. The proportion of working-class students has also dropped, as has the number of young people from the most deprived neighbourhoods. Ministers described the figures as "disappointing". The drop suggests that the Government's drive to widen access to higher education has stalled, despite costing £300m. The figures, from the Higher Education Statistics Agency, show that 86.7 per cent of university places were taken by state-school pupils in 2004/05, a drop of 0.1 percentage points on the previous year and 0.5 percentage points down on 2002/03's figure. About 93 per cent of young people are educated at state schools. Surely universities today are full of poorer students? This is a popular perception, but is simply not true. Middle-class youngsters have been the main beneficiaries of the recent expansion of higher education. In fact, the latest university expansion, in the 1990s, has widened the gap in opportunities enjoyed by the richest and the poorest families in Britain. Children from the richest 20 per cent of families are about five times more likely to acquire a degree by age 23 than children from the poorest 20 per cent, up from about three times in the early 1980s. In 1999, 46 per cent of children whose parental incomes were in the highest 20 per cent of incomes acquired a degree by age 23, compared with just 9 per cent of children in the lowest 20 per cent. In 1981, the figures were 20 per cent for the highest 20 per cent and 6 per cent for the lowest 20 per cent. Don't universities let in poorer students with lower grades? This has been a controversial issue. Universities consider each application on its merits, but a growing number of schemes encourage lower offers to disadvantaged students. In 2003, the University of Bristol faced a boycott by independent schools after allegations that the university was asking for lower A-level grades from applicants from poorly performing state schools, so that private-school candidates with predicted or actual straight-As were losing out. The schools called off the boycott after being reassured that their pupils were not being discriminated against. Bristol admitted it sometimes made marginally lower offers, but only to individuals who had suffered "particular disadvantage", and it would mean AAB offers rather than the usual AAA. In 2004, a government taskforce ruled out automatic positive discrimination that would favour students from certain groups, such as state school pupils. But it argued that each student's application should be looked at individually, and in certain cases admissions tutors should choose less-qualified candidates from underprivileged or under-represented backgrounds. Why aren't poorer students taking up university places? There are two possible explanations: poorer students either aren't applying to university, or they do apply but don't get in. It is still true that many young people from families with no history of university education simply do not think that going on to higher education is for them. The Government has set an enormous task in changing deep-seated social attitudes among young people and their parents. Research from the Sutton Trust charity found even the brightest students from poor backgrounds may lack the confidence to make the most of their gifts.A government taskforce has criticised the admissions process, arguing that admissions officers often had not had proper training and that poorer, less well-prepared students could be disadvantaged by questions on application forms and in interviews. Does the background of university students really matter? Social mobility in the UK has fallen since just after the Second World War. For people now in their thirties, who were born in the 1970s, what their parents did for a living had more of a bearing on their life chances than people who were born in the late 1950s. In a keynote speech, the then Secretary of State for Education, Ruth Kelly, stressed that the profile of university students was a concern. Creating a more balanced cohort was vital to create a cohesive society, she said, arguing that exclusion was the "breeding ground for disengagement, social unrest and a breakdown in community cohesion". Will this trend continue? While the Government hopes that the figures will improve, John Selby, the director of widening participation at Hefce - the Higher Education Funding Council for England - warns that increased competition for university places will make it increasingly difficult for disadvantaged students to win places when the demand from middle-class families is growing so strongly. "The underlying social forces are much more important than the actions of a small group of institutions. It has got much more competitive to get into higher education, which means that young people from disadvantaged backgrounds now have a higher hurdle to jump," he says. "I think it's going to get even harder. The children of the people who benefited from the expansion of higher education in the Sixties, Seventies and Eighties are now likely to apply to higher education and create a high demand. So it is much more difficult for people who come from backgrounds with no history of higher education to compete with that." Should everyone be able to go to university? It depends. It would be unjust if poorer students were prevented from fulfilling their potential because of their parents' low income or social background. However, many young people may not be suited to university, for example, they may not be academically minded enough to cope with degree-level study, or they may want to pursue a career that is best learnt outside of the lecture hall. What matters is that they should have the choice. Does it matter if fewer disadvantaged youngsters are going to university? Yes... * A degree is a passport to higher salaries. The income divide will grow if poorer students are unable to compete on equal terms * Social cohesion will be damaged if sections of the community feel excluded from opportunities enjoyed by the rest * It matters to the Government, which wants 50 per cent of young people to go into higher education by 2010 No... * As long as the brightest get in to university, it is irrelevant what their parents' incomes and social backgrounds are * Apprenticeships and work-related learning can be a more appropriate start to many careers * There won't be enough graduate jobs for
all, so poorer students would be better off skipping university and staying
out of debt
France : Les frais d'inscription à la fac dérapent Selon une enquête de l'Unef, 62 % des universités s'exposent à des recours contentieux. Par Fabrice TASSEL - Libératuion - Mardi
18 juillet 2006
Pour la deuxième année, l'Unef a dévoilé hier son palmarès des universités hors la loi en matière de frais d'inscription. Selon le syndicat étudiant, le constat est encore plus accablant que l'an passé, puisque 62 % des universités (contre 60 % en 2005) s'exposent à des recours contentieux. D'après la loi, les droits d'inscription hors Sécurité sociale pour 2006-2007 s'élèvent à 162 euros pour un étudiant en licence, 211 en mastère et 320 pour un doctorant. Ces frais légaux ont augmenté de 4,9 % en moyenne par rapport à l'an dernier. S'y ajoutent souvent des frais supplémentaires, pas toujours présentés comme facultatifs, qui ne correspondent pas à une prestation précisément identifiée. Intitulés «frais de dossier» ou «frais pédagogiques», ils visent une activité sportive ou la préparation à des concours. Ces sommes complémentaires peuvent faire déraper le budget des étudiants et atteindre, selon l'enquête de l'Unef, jusqu'à 3 500 euros, comme à l'université d'Aix-Marseille-III. Son président a contesté toute illégalité, expliquant que cette somme permet aux étudiants du mastère de l'Institut d'administration des entreprises de bénéficier d'un accompagnement professionnel et de participer à des ateliers sur l'emploi. L'Unef affirme cependant que de plus en plus d'universités tentent de dissimuler ces frais d'inscription. Le syndicat a appelé Gilles de Robien, le ministre de l'Education nationale, à s'engager sur ce dossier. |