Work placements in the US are no longer an American dream
With student debt at an all-time high and companies continuing to tighten their belts, prospects can seem bleak for the latest crop of university leavers. Work experience has long been a staple path to securing permanent employment, and it is undeniable that in a straightened economy internships can provide a vital foothold on the increasingly vertiginous rockface of the corporate job market.
Bridging the great divide: is it possible to cross from the Arts to Sciences?
Since 1959, and C. P. Snow’s infamous Rede lecture, there has been a queue of intellectuals determined to find a gulf between the two cultures in university education – the Arts and the Sciences.
Is protesting an integral part of the student experience?
Last Saturday, students took to the streets of London and Manchester to stage the latest in a series of protests against higher tuition fees and public spending cuts. To many, these demonstrations marked the end of what had seemed like a decade of student apathy and a return to the “good ol’ days” of students protesting. But is it fair to call protesting an integral part of the university experience? We spoke to a few people, some of whom went on the protests and some of whom did not, to find out.
Is now the right time to get back on course?
It’s a new year – and a financially bleak one if all the economic predictions are to be believed. In 2011 many of us may find ourselves working longer, earning less and finding it a struggle to pay the bills.
Britain’s top ten student eateries
Apart from battling through Kant, getting your head around quantum mechanics and thinking about reading Ulysses, most people spend their student days sitting in that favoured pub or café watching the hours pass by. It’s something close to every student’s heart, that local provider of good food, strong coffee and cheap alcohol. We’ve selected the ten best places students go to get a square meal.
Food for thought: how one young entrepreneur turned a drunken idea into a tasty business
While recent graduates everywhere are busy panicking about their lack of job opportunities, 24-year-old Josh Magidson is feeling pretty smug. After all, Londoner Josh has just sold the website he set up at university to the e-commerce giant Just Eat for £500,000.
Inside Student
Joel Cohen: The weakness of the tuition fees protest
Despite the multitude of banners, chants and speeches at last Wednesday’s national student demonstration ’Fund Our Future: Stop Education Cuts’, which brought an estimated 50,000 students out onto the streets, I still find it hard to demystify exactly what my fellow students were protesting about. Was it a frustration with Lib Dem impotence, a rejection of the marketisation and the gentrification of higher education, or a stand against austerity more broadly?
Mastery over the mind gets ailing athletes back on track
Training is more of a marathon than a sprint, but sport psychologists tell Kate Hilpern theirs is the perfect job
How much will the budget cuts affect your studies?
As uncertainty looms over higher education funding, Hilary Wilce looks at how postgraduates will be affected
Tips for settling into university
Be the model housemate and don't forget to scrub up
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