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GLASGOW EDITION October 2015
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YOU OWE IT TO YOUR POOREST GREAT SCOT! NEW LIFE FOR LANDMARK
Call for universities to help those from deprived regions CALLUM CREANEY
IT IS the past and present working together to provide future Glasgow students with a place to live. This artist’s impression shows what the historic Scotway House might look like after an application was submitted by Glasgow Harbour to transform it into a bar and restaurant – acting as a gateway for 407 new student digs behind it. The listed building, which was built in 1885 as an office for Meadowside Shipyard, has been derelict for more than 20 years. Sophie McNaughton
GLASGOW students are calling on authorities to do more to help people from Scotland’s most deprived areas go to university. Their appeal comes after Ucas revealed 9.7 per cent of 18-year-old applicants from the poorest areas in Scotland got into university, compared with 18.1 per cent in England and 16.2 per cent in Wales and Northern Ireland. Martin Laird, 18, a first-year dental student at the University of Glasgow, said: ‘There should be greater measures put in place to raise the number of applicants from deprived areas being successful because, at the crux of it all, admission to university should be based on your academic ability and potential – not your upbringing and domestic location. ‘I think a joint venture into tackling it should be made by
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the universities, local councils and the government.’ A statement from the Scottish government said the figures were not suitable for a UK comparison but first minister Nicola Sturgeon considered the issue ‘a serious economic, social and moral challenge’. Speaking at Wester Hailes Education Centre, she announced plans to widen access to education by tackling attainment discrepancies between areas of high and low deprivation. Aidan Bonner, 21, a fourthyear sociology and politics student at the University of the West of Scotland, added: ‘I feel that Scotland has a different attitude towards higher education and that it’s more sensible to get a trade and start earning as soon as possible to add stability.’ A spokesperson from
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