The Independent Cambridge Student Newspaper
11th February 2011 Issue No. 735
ESTD 1947
Opinion The Debate: Should Valentineâs Day be forgotten about? p6
Culture The history of that hallowed place: the bed. p9
Sport Town downs Gown in bloody battle. p15
A sticky end: Fitzbillies closes its doors after 90 years (cont. page 4)
Deputy PM says Oxbridge plan to charge maximum tuition fees is ânot up to themâ tristan Dunn political correspondent
Nick Clegg has criticised Cambridge and Oxford for considering tuition fees of ÂŁ9,000, stating that the decision âis not up to themâ. Mr Cleggâs comments came after an internal University document revealed on Tuesday that the University is planning to charge the maximum fees allowed under the Governmentâs new higher education proposals. The document makes a number of recommendations to the University Council on fees, bursaries and widening participation. Its main point is that a flat-rate fee of ÂŁ9,000 should be charged to all UK and EU students irrespective of course or College. One section of the report says: âThe level of tuition fee charged from 2012 entry should be the maximum permissible, i.e. ÂŁ9,000 per annum with any subsequent adjustment for inflationary increases.â Academics at the University of Oxford convened on Tuesday to consider the same issue; it seems likely that they will also look to charge the maximum fees permissible. Reacting to Mr Cleggâs comments, Edward Couzens, an undergraduate of Downing College, told Varsity, âNick Cleggâs naĂŻvety appears to know no bounds. Given the spending cuts to higher education, how can the University of Cambridge expect to maintain its academic reputation without charging the maximum fees?â A University spokesperson refused to comment on Mr Cleggâs statement, saying that they were âwaiting for the University Council to consider the working groupâs proposals.â However, a section of the working group paper says: âTo charge less than ÂŁ9,000 might raise questions about our commitment to excellence since a reduced fee in the long term could only be sustained by reducing costs and hence quality.â The comments were made in a
BBC debate between students and the Deputy Prime Minister. One of the students said to Mr Clegg, âYou are either stupid, or you are mad, or you are malicious.â In the debate, Clegg stated that Cambridge and Oxford would only be able to charge fees of ÂŁ9,000 if they âdramatically increaseâ access for students from deprived backgrounds. Universities also face fines of up to ÂŁ0.5 million from the Government if they fail to meet such access targets. The Cambridge working group paper does show, however, that the University will be making an active attempt to support those students from poorer backgrounds. One proposal states that students whose family income is less than ÂŁ25,000 will only be applicable for tuition fees of ÂŁ6,000. In addition, a bursary of ÂŁ1,625 will be offered to students whose parents earn less than ÂŁ25,000. This bursary falls to zero once family income rises over ÂŁ42,000. The report also recommends that the University should attempt to increase the proportion of students from state schools to between 61 and 63 per cent from its current level of 58 per cent. CUSU president Rahul Mansigani commented, âCambridge offers a fantastic educational experience: with a tripling of the standard fee to ÂŁ9000, the need for proactive Access work from the University is more important than ever.â Preservation of âproactiveâ accessmay be an issue given that the current cash bursary of ÂŁ3,400 is being cut to ÂŁ1,625 under the new proposals. The fee waiver of ÂŁ3,000 does however make up for the fall in the cash bursary. The University is said to be limiting use of the maintenance bursary due to a âshortfall between costs and incomeâ. All universities in England and Wales must send proposals for fees, financial support for students and access provisions to OFFA by 31st March. A final decision is expected from Cambridge in the coming weeks.
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