Alexandra Frean, Education Editor
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University applicants will be able to apply for their student loans at the same time as they apply for their places, and will receive offers for both simultaneously, under government plans to widen access to higher education.
John Denham, the Universities Secretary, said that the proposal would give students more time to make plans for financing their studies as well as providing information and reassurance to those who were daunted by the fear of student debt.
There is evidence that a significant minority of A-level and mature students are deterred from taking up university offers, or from applying in the first place, for fear that they might not be eligible for student loans or might not be able to manage repayments once they graduate.
Mr Denham said that the key to overcoming this was to find innovative ways of encouraging students and their families to think about and understand student finance earlier.
“We want to have a system where you can formally apply for your student finance at the same time as sending off your Ucas [Universities and Colleges Admissions Service] form. That way, they would know where they stand from the outset,” he told The Times.
The change would accompany a move to allow students to apply to university after they have received their A-level results. At present students are offered university places on the basis of grades predicted by their teachers, but research has shown that half of these predictions are routinely wrong, although usually only by one grade. Mr Denham said that he hoped a new system of postqualification application would be introduced from 2012.
The predicted grades system can work against bright students who lack the confidence to apply for competitive, high entry-grade courses at prestigious institutions. Experts believe that allowing them to apply after their results may persuade the most able to lift their sights. “The particular attraction is that there maybe some students who would apply for a different choice of institution once they know how they have done,” Mr Denham said. He was speaking before a publicity campaign to raise public awareness and increases to student financial support.
An extra 100,000 students a year will be eligible for grants towards university living costs once the new system starts. In the next academic year, the parental earnings limit will be raised to £60,000, enabling more middle-class students to qualify for a subsidy, which will range from £100 at the upper end to the full £2,835 a year for those from families earning less than £25,000, up from the present £18,360 limit.
The announcement is intended to reassure those who fear that the introduction of the £3,000-a-year top-up fees at university from September last year would deter students from deprived backgrounds.
Mr Denham said that the extra financial support would help even more young people to fulfil their ambitions for a university education. He emphasised that students would not be expected to repay any student loan until after they had graduated and had a job. The measures also include a new “repayment holiday” to allow graduates to take a break of up to five years from their loan repayments to help to meet the cost of buying a home or starting a family.
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I will be graduating this year and want to go on to a post-grad course but there are no student loans or grants available. I'm £10k in debt and my parents can't afford to support me so I'm expected to take a normal loan from a bank to finance my final year, leaving me £20k in debt! It's a disgrace!
Will Green, Oxford, England
I find it really unfair about how the maintenance grants and loans work as many students from middle class backgrounds will be starting at university in exactly the same way as the ones of working class backgrounds having no support from their parents. Why do they ask about what peoples household income is if they are no longer living at home and going to university - surely their real household income would be a negative number with the debts people are likely to accrue!
Thom, Flitwick,
I wish tuition fees were free in England (except for tinpot degrees) and that an accommodation , book and living expenses (or Hall) means tested grant was offered to every prospective undergraduate. Student debt, a creation of the fairly recent past has blighted the lives and H. E. experience of my children. They started their working life in debt already. Those who don't make it to a university should also get a grant to help them through their training, apprenticeship (remember those ?) or distance learning if they are prepared to put the effort in. The money for this could come from Iraq,Afghanistan,illegal immigrant mollycoddling and Whitehall nest-feathering. On the aspect of applying after receiving A Level results, pity the poor examiners who are being forced to drop contracts in order to get marking in on time.
Eric Paul Lishman, Cockermouth, UK
This govt is obsessed with targets and statistics. Bright students from poorer backgrounds will want to go to university regardless of all these initiatives to tweak the rules - for as long as they can see a real job with a proper salary and career prospects at the end of the rainbow. It seems as if these loan repayment breaks and 'holidays' are effectively the old student grants in disguise which some students will never have to repay.
Robert Hill, Harpenden, Herts UK
its fine isnt it im not stupid. if a student is "deterred" from applying because they cant fill in a form should they be at university
student, London, England