You see, the NUS scheme will apply to ALL graduates, not just people starting new degrees in 2012. That's what they call "retroactive taxation", or changing the rules after people have already made their choices. After all, it's not like you can give your university degree BACK. Oh, but they've "had the benefit" of further education, says Harry Porter, it's only FAIR that they pay up now.
BOLLOX TO THE NUS!!! This makes me indescribably angry. As the blogger says, past grads have already made their choices, based on the situation at the time/over the course of their degree. It's ridiculous unfair to change it behind their back.
Just raising f'ing (higher rate) income tax is fairer!
Of course, what I would really like to see is university education to be free - but require a much higher entry standard in terms of academic (or artistic) performance. Yeah, I know rich kids can be tutored to the nines and all that, but it must be possible to have the entry tests/assesments favour people that can actually think/learn as opposed to the spoon-fed. Oh yeah, and chucking people out a bit more readily for not working/achieving once they are there might be a plan....
I'd like to combine this with proper apprenticeship schemes for the non-academic, where they can learn practical trades/occupations on the job, from those who are already doing it. And for those to start quite young, I doubt we'd get it below 16, but more like 14 would be better, give the kids the chance to see early that real people work, and have self-discipline and pride in their work, and to respect them for that [and themselves!] (Ok, so that'd take a bit of organising to get them under the right folks, but it could be done).
I think someone should point Mr SingularityHub at the "How smart, analytical people can avoid accidentally violating the "don't be a dick" principle" link....
"Beware the "Fluffy" story. How manufactured news stories are used for cheap advertising"
I've lost count of the amount of news stories this year where the punchline has basically been "and it turned out there was an iphone app for something after all!"
Plus: "Dramatic rejuvenation of prematurely aged mice hints at potential therapy." - "Protecting chromosome tips doesn't just prevent ageing. It can reverse it." etc.
Of course, if it proves to work with the normally aged too, and with humans, then that won't be a time for understatement. And justify these headlines too.
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You see, the NUS scheme will apply to ALL graduates, not just people starting new degrees in 2012. That's what they call "retroactive taxation", or changing the rules after people have already made their choices. After all, it's not like you can give your university degree BACK. Oh, but they've "had the benefit" of further education, says Harry Porter, it's only FAIR that they pay up now.
BOLLOX TO THE NUS!!! This makes me indescribably angry. As the blogger says, past grads have already made their choices, based on the situation at the time/over the course of their degree. It's ridiculous unfair to change it behind their back.
Just raising f'ing (higher rate) income tax is fairer!
Of course, what I would really like to see is university education to be free - but require a much higher entry standard in terms of academic (or artistic) performance. Yeah, I know rich kids can be tutored to the nines and all that, but it must be possible to have the entry tests/assesments favour people that can actually think/learn as opposed to the spoon-fed. Oh yeah, and chucking people out a bit more readily for not working/achieving once they are there might be a plan....
I'd like to combine this with proper apprenticeship schemes for the non-academic, where they can learn practical trades/occupations on the job, from those who are already doing it. And for those to start quite young, I doubt we'd get it below 16, but more like 14 would be better, give the kids the chance to see early that real people work, and have self-discipline and pride in their work, and to respect them for that [and themselves!] (Ok, so that'd take a bit of organising to get them under the right folks, but it could be done).
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I've lost count of the amount of news stories this year where the punchline has basically been "and it turned out there was an iphone app for something after all!"
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http://www.nature.com/news/2010/101128/full/news.2010.635.html
Headline: "Telomerase reverses ageing process"
Plus: "Dramatic rejuvenation of prematurely aged mice hints at potential therapy." - "Protecting chromosome tips doesn't just prevent ageing. It can reverse it." etc.
Of course, if it proves to work with the normally aged too, and with humans, then that won't be a time for understatement. And justify these headlines too.