Recently, a latest opinion poll shows that the number of young people who think college is worth attending has dropped sharply in the past five years.
According to a survey conducted by Ipsos Murray for Sutton Trust, a British educational charity, only 75% of the people aged 1 1- 16 who were interviewed thought that only higher education could lead a better life. 20 13 years, accounting for 86%.
This result was released on the day when the A-level exam was released, and 238 1 people were interviewed. Among them, 77% people think that they will continue to go to college after graduating from high school, but almost half (46%) people are worried about their tuition fees.
Sir Peter Lampel, founder of Sutton Trust and chairman of the British Endowment for Education, said: "Young people are facing a dilemma." "If they continue to go to college, they will face debts of more than 50,000 pounds, which even affects him. At the same time, those students who enter the university as apprentices think they have made a wise choice. Apprentices are students trained by enterprises. Noah Belchem, a student at Blackburn College, received a certificate in mechanical engineering, which earned him an apprentice degree from the industrial giant rolls royce. This is very important from an economic point of view. I know this is the career I want. Being an apprentice in such a great company has really changed my future. James Kirk, Belchem's classmate at Blackburn College, also chose to become a degree apprentice. He said, "After three or four years, I may have earned a salary of 60,000 pounds instead of debt. "