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Higher education

Leaving uni after first term

10 replies

Monica53 · 13/01/2020 20:58

Hi
Just wondering what percentage of students drop out of uni after first term? and also what are ramifications ie: costs ie SFE also options ? Thank you

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MrHaroldFry · 13/01/2020 21:05

Depends on the institution. Some have higher drop out rates. In some it's one in five students (20%). Cambridge however is 1% (these are 2015/figures)

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Monica53 · 13/01/2020 21:10

@MrHaroldFry Thank you for reply - its Bristol ? Maybe / maybe not dropping out? Avenues to explore once calms down😳

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CheddarGorgeous · 13/01/2020 21:14

You need to talk to your university - student support and student funding to work out the implications.

There are options depending on your course structure. You might be able to intermit.

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Monica53 · 13/01/2020 21:18

@CheddarGorgeous Thank you - think they’re chatting to student support tonight ?

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Daisydaysgoneby · 13/01/2020 21:25

My best friend did this after one term. Another friend did it a year later. I miss them both. They were sensitive people.

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titchy · 13/01/2020 21:48

Does it matter what other students do? The important question is what is right for your child.

If the decision is made quickly - and the university tells SFE the last date attendance was in the autumn (have they attended yet this term?) they'll have to pay back their term 2 maintenance. That means in the future they will be entitled to full fee and maintenance, apart from one terms worth which has been used up. If they don't carry on studying and go into work, they'll have loan repayments on the same basis as everyone else.

It's really not a disaster though - as long as lessons are learned.

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Monica53 · 13/01/2020 22:29

@titchy- thank you for your reply and advice - appreciated

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titchy · 13/01/2020 22:40

Smile Remember - better to leave with MH intact, and better to leave with almost full loan entitlement than use it all up on the wrong course.

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bibliomania · 14/01/2020 09:23

Check the student financial regulations on the university website (I had a look for you but Bristol requires a university log-in). Normally students pay a certain percentage of fees by a certain date - it's good to be aware of the cut-off points, so the student minimizes the fees owed.

If it's not the right course/university, there's no point trying to power through and be miserable. On the other hand, post-Christmas wobbles are fairly common - the difficulty is trying to figure out which it is.

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titchy · 14/01/2020 13:06

Check the student financial regulations on the university website

SFE determine the regulations, not the university. The cut off is two weeks into a course - so you can do the first two weeks then quit with nothing owing, or if you quit part way through you're liable for fees (25% term 1 and 2, 50% term 3) and maintenance paid once you've started a term.

Which is why it's important OP's dc gets Bristol to say he/she hasn't attended anything in term 2. I don't know when term starts so it's feasible no teaching will have taken place yet anyway.

Another useful bit of info - where a student leave due to MH or a disability, SFE have the discretion to ignore previous loans awarded and re-set the clock. Not guaranteed but useful to flag if these are the circumstances.

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