Beaver
Issue 837 | 20.10.15
the
Newspaper of the LSE Students’ Union
School Scraps £50 Admin Fee for Masters Applications James Clark Staff Writer
A F T E R OV E R A Y E A R of lobbying the school, London School of Economics Student Union (LSESU) General Secretary, Nona Buckley-Irvine, has managed to secure the removal of a £50 application administration assessment fee for current London School of Economics (LSE) students. The non-refundable fee existed as LSE do not use an external company for graduate admissions unlike other universities. For that reason, the School is required to cover the cost of processing the sheer number of applications that are submitted to the LSE. The fee covers the administrative work that is required to process a Masters application, which includes checking applications to make sure that transcripts, graduate entry test scores, CV’s and references are in the application before it is moved onto Admissions in the relevant department. As a result of the lobbying, current LSE students will not be required to pay to submit their application to masters programmes at the LSE. The extra fee could have been offputting to potential students who, because of it, may be reluctant to apply for a master’s course at LSE. The new policy does not apply to
students who are applying from other institutions, nor does it apply to LSE Alumni. Many are disappointed that The School has yet to expand the policy to include LSE Alumni. At the next committee meeting there are plans for a request to be submitted so that Alumni will be exempt as well as current students. The £75 charge for amending programme choice is still currently in place, which is only charged if a student fails to gain an offer for both of their initial choices or wishes to change one of their choices. The relevant form only changes the courses and if applicable a personal statement, so the reason for a higher charge on this is still yet to be explained as the effect of such a form on an application is less admin than an application itself. The success of this campaign comes as part of a broader emphasis on Widening Participation from the Students’ Union this year. Applications for Masters Courses at LSE open on 19th October and continue on a rolling basis until places are allocated for entry in September 2016, with a Graduate Open Evening on the 4th November giving potential students the opportunity to find out more about postgraduate courses at LSE. The School’s Undergraduate and General Course students are also entitled to a ten per cent discount on taught Masters programmes.
‘Understanding Inequality Group’ kick off the first Whiteboard Campaign of the year
Comment: Student Satisfaction: We’re All In This Together Sam Povey Former Features Editor
I DON’T THINK I CAN count the number of times that I’ve been disappointed during my two years studying Economics with Economic History at LSE. The woeful teaching, the constant timetable screw-ups, and a student nightclub queuing system that would test a monk’s nerve. It was to my surprise, therefore, to discover that I was one of the lucky ones.
As an article in a previous edition of The Beaver declares, ‘Student dissatisfaction at LSE is due to the prioritising of quantitative course over others.’ If I’m being ‘prioritised’ what the hell are they doing to everyone else? The author rightly bemoans the state of LSE’s student satisfaction. Frankly, it’s embarrassing. LSE ranks third in the country, but is placed in the bottom 20 for student satisfaction, alongside King’s and UCL. But
the pain is not equally shared, apparently. As she puts it, ‘I don’t know what the [Accounting and Finance] and Economics people have to grumble about.’ On what basis should we, ‘the quants’, keep our mouths shut? Three reasons, according to the author. The first is lecture capture. I will admit that here, she has a point. Students taking the core courses for economics enjoy having all lectures recorded, allowing them to watch, pause
and rewind at their leisure. This is certainly an area that other departments at LSE lag behind. As for our ‘nifty handouts’ we are given for every lecture, they are nice, but certainly no luxury. The average economics student sees more graphs in a sing le lecture than most historians during their undergraduate career – this makes note-taking a bit of a challenge.We weren’t selected for our artistic ability after all. But hey, I suppose we do save money on our LSE gym
The City Features
“Osbourne’s political ploy isn’t just Interview with North Korean vacuous; it will actively risk Defector, Hyeonseo Lee the UK’s recovery”
Page 23 Page 26-27
membership by lugging those packs back and forth to campus every day. Most baffling of all is the author’s admiration of the ‘huge’ Peacock Theatre. But to econonmics students, it is better known as a hellish chasm of despair, filled with broken dreams of intellectual curiosity, and the shrill echoes of Margaret Bray explaining uncompensated demand. Its cushy seats... Continued on Page 9