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Some university students in the United Kingdom are not content with how schools spend their tuition fees.
For years, UK university students have been demanding to know where their tuition fees go. Recently, the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) published a research paper titled Where Do Student Fees Really Go? For this research, HEPI surveyed UK universities such as Nottingham Trent University and Essex [ES-iks] University.
The responses of the universities revealed that less than half of students’ fees go to teaching-related expenses. Most of the remaining money is set aside for maintenance of school structures, rooms, and equipment. A certain portion is also spent on financial assistance to underprivileged students.
However, some students are not pleased with the allocation of their tuition fees. In particular, they are unhappy that part of their fees goes to non-academic expenses like marketing and building relations with the community. Students want their tuition fees to be spent more on initiatives related to teaching.
Annual university tuition fees can reach up to £9,250. According to the United Kingdom’s National Union of Students head Shakira Martin, students would naturally want more information on how their money is spent because of the high price of education. Martin called for more transparency and accountability from universities, beginning with a published list that itemizes the expenses that tuition fees are used on. She also pushed for students’ participation in deliberating where tuition fees should be spent.
In response, Universities UK chief executive Alistair Jarvis said that the organization is collaborating with schools. The organization is working to create guidelines, which it intends to publish soon, on how to make information on tuition fee expenses more accessible to students.