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Saturday, February 04 2012

Angry student protesters march through Canterbury

Students marched through Canterbury to protest against tuition fees and debtStudents from universities and colleges in Canterbury joined forces on Saturday to protest against tuition fees and debt.

The Canterbury United campaign saw members of student unions from Canterbury College, Canterbury Christ Church University, the University of Kent and the University of the Creative Arts march through the city.

Carrying placards and shouting Love Canterbury, Hate Debt, they ended their protest in the Dane John gardens, where they were addressed by Aaron Porter, vice-president of the National Union of Students, with responsibility for higher education.

Outlining the state of university finance, Mr Porter said if debt increased any further students would make their further education choices on the grounds of finance and not courses.

He said: “We were very pleased with the turn-out on the march and lots more students said they would have joined it but they were working to try to make ends meet.

“Most people, including students, think it is only fair to contribute towards tuition fees but the average debt held by students when they left university in 2009 was £22,000, and that is more than enough. The vast majority of politicians got free education or grants but it is not like that for us.”

Video: See the march in action in Canterbury city centre.

The march was followed by a well-attended debate at Christ Church University’s library at Augustine House, where the speakers included Mr Porter and MP Julian Brazier.

For full story see this week’s Kentish Gazette.

Monday, March 01 2010

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  • chris pannell wrote:

    the country should pay for what the country needs

    Students can be very off-putting en-masse and when the mood is on them, but here I wholeheartedly agree with them. If the country wants skilled people to facilitate the "knowledge-based" economy, as it keeps repeating like a mantra, then it should pay for them. Without a knowledge-based economy we stand no chance against the (currrently available)cheap labour of China and India, and the mineral wealth of south America - and these countries are quickly evolving knowledge-based economies too. To saddle a young man or woman with a 30K debt at the start of their career, and then hit them with 40% tax once they manage to earn a decent living wage, 20% VAT and no chance of owning their own home is not just demoralizing, it is the stuff of revolution. It is very convenient that a typical university course is of about the same duration of the "visible" part of a bog-standard politician's career. This allows politicians to use HE as a method of disguising the sad fact that unemployment in the UK is soaring among the young, at least for their watch. I am convinced that this is the only use that most politicians have for universities. Like all the phases of education, they don't understand it, don't respect or the people who practice it, but they simply have to control it at all costs, NuLab more than most. Rather ironic, but in my day we would probably have loved to have this left-wing, even Stalinist, government in power, and would probably have been undescerning enough not to rumble their masterplan for a socially engineered and pliable UK either.

    04 Mar 2010 1:28 AM

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