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25 votes
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Real talk with Skyline High School’s violence interrupter
14 votes -
Colleges have a new worry: ‘Ghost students’—AI powered fraud rings angling to get millions in financial aid
23 votes -
How algorithms, alpha males and tradwives are winning the war for kids’ minds
46 votes -
The Harvard student who killed her roomate
16 votes -
What it’s like to graduate from college while inside an Illinois prison
10 votes -
Norway's party buses for school-leavers have become a trend that worries schools and parents alike
14 votes -
Ungdomsøen, an island fort in the Øresund strait, lets stressed Danish students unplug from distractions and study in nature
12 votes -
Why aren't we talking about the real reason male college enrollment is dropping?
33 votes -
Lawsuit reveals how US colleges really talk about rich applicants
12 votes -
Lawsuit reveals how United States private colleges talk about rich applicants
12 votes -
Z-Library helps students to overcome academic poverty, study finds
38 votes -
Private school - worthwhile/good idea for not rich people?
Did you or someone you know go to [edit public private, parent paid] school, esp if the students' parents can't easily afford it? Did their parents actually move to be closer to a prestigious...
Did you or someone you know go to [edit
publicprivate, parent paid] school, esp if the students' parents can't easily afford it? Did their parents actually move to be closer to a prestigious school? Is it worth it for folks who aren't old boys/old girls and in general are neither new nor old money? Does it ever make sense to use the college fund to pay for secondary education?28 votes -
The elite college students who can’t read books
57 votes -
The phone ban has had a big impact on school work (at a school in Iceland)
27 votes -
Finnish pupils in Riihimaki headed back to school with backpacks full of books after a decade of state-backed promotion of laptops and other digital devices in the classroom
7 votes -
Teachers, how has Covid-19 affected your students and classes long term?
I only know a handful of teachers personally, and I’m fascinated by their unique perspectives on how the pandemic affected their classrooms. I’m curious how instruction adapted during 2020 and...
I only know a handful of teachers personally, and I’m fascinated by their unique perspectives on how the pandemic affected their classrooms.
I’m curious how instruction adapted during 2020 and 2021 quarantine, how younger or older students were impacted by losing a year of socialization, and other remarkable or surprising changes that came from those years. How did it affect you personally? Were you happier teaching before covid and unhappy with the permanent changes post-pandemic, or vice versa?
My second hand knowledge is mostly from elementary school teachers in the southeast US. I’d love to hear from teachers across all age groups, especially outside the US.
26 votes -
When dozens of migrant students arrived in Rotterdam, New York, the local school district scrambled to adapt
10 votes -
Sandy Hook school shooting survivors graduate from high school
25 votes -
How tens of thousands of US grad workers are organizing themselves
12 votes -
Protesters unaffiliated with CCNY, Columbia made up nearly half of arrests: police
23 votes -
The state as blunt force - impressions of the Columbia campus clearance
11 votes -
The youth need your help
21 votes -
The parents in my classroom
25 votes -
How Chinese students experience America
23 votes -
Relative financial burden imposed on university students by housing cost in Germany steadily increasing. About a third of all students close to poverty line. How does this compare to your region?
The latest iteration of a study regarding the cost of student housing in Germany found, that rent prices for students have risen to a germany-wide average of 479€. Three years ago the average was...
The latest iteration of a study regarding the cost of student housing in Germany found, that rent prices for students have risen to a germany-wide average of 479€. Three years ago the average was just 391€. In Munich the average cost for student housing has risen to no less than 760€. This is more than double than the housing-cost covered by BAföG, a public program providing financial support to students from low-income families. [1]
Statistically, more than a third of students in Germany are at risk of poverty at the moment, meaning they have less than 60% of the country's mean income available. [2] [3]
Also with regards to Munich specifically, the number of designated student housing facilities has not grown significantly or even dropped over the past few years, while the number of students has been steadily increasing. This means that more and more students have to look for rooms in shared apartments on the city's highly competitive housing market. Statistically, these students are those that live close to the poverty line particularly often.
I realize that the cost of high-quality higher education in Germany is not as majorly fucked as for example in the USA, but still the financial burden on students is steadily increasing due to housing cost. How does this compare to where you're from? How is student housing organized in your city, how much does it cost relative to the mean income, and do you experience similar trends in your region?
Sources (german), besides in-person conversations and experiences:
[1] https://cms.moses-mendelssohn-institut.de/uploads/24_03_19_Wohnkosten_Studierende_804a7b53ef.pdf
[2] https://www.spiegel.de/start/statistisches-bundesamt-mehr-als-ein-drittel-der-studierenden-lebt-unter-der-armutsgrenze-a-460cb19f-8a62-43ab-8b52-652814234250
[3] https://youtu.be/UVaY8SCtjwg28 votes