ответ:Has university life changed beyond recognition for a new generation of undergraduates or is it the same as it ever was? Five parents compare their own experiences with their children’s
Long gone but not forgotten are those carefree student days of shared showers, derelict rental properties and parties where the booze always ran out before midnight. Being a student was quite a privilege in the good old days when local authorities and the government footed the bill and there was almost certainly a job at the end of it.
In the early 1960s, only 4% of school leavers went to university, rising to around 14% by the end of the 1970s. Nowadays, more than 40% of young people start undergraduate degrees – but it comes at a cost. Today’s students leave with debts of £40,000 and upwards to pay back over their working lives.
Объяснение:
The first session for me, probably like for all students, was difficult. I was very tired and taught a lot, sometimes I only slept for 5-6 hours a day.
The most memorable was the anatomy test. We passed first according to the systems, and then everything in place, i.e. a big test.
In the big competition, according to tradition, they greeted the teacher and sat down. After that, she said that three of them have a's and they will not pass the big test. But among them, unfortunately, I did not enter because on the first small test, I got a three. They were so happy, and we were left envious of them to pass a big test. And so I got a b in anatomy.