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I did a Masters in 2011/12 and got some funding towards it. They seem to have a list of supported courses for each year for Scottish post-grad students and if your course is on the list then they can give you some funding. I also got extra funding from a trust called Carnegie-Cameron:

http://www.carnegie-trust.org/our-award-schemes/postgraduate-schemes.html

I got about 8 grand in the end so its definitely worth looking in to and there does seem to be a lot better funding for Scottish Students looking to study a post-grad in Scotland.

Yeah the course was from the list of SAAS funded courses. Was just unsure of what 'some funding means'. Do they tend to hand out the full 3.5k or some of it?

Cheers for the bursary link, that's definitely worth pursuing :thumsup2

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To add further annoying questions into the mix has anyone ever done an English language taught postgrad abroad?

Probably not going to happen but just a thought. My problem is the few remaining countries with state funded higher education are the better off ones where the cost of living is high.

Might end up stumping up the €800 tuition fees for some polytech in Belgrade or somewhere. Probably not going to enhance my career but it'd be a decent laugh for a year.

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Yeah the course was from the list of SAAS funded courses. Was just unsure of what 'some funding means'. Do they tend to hand out the full 3.5k or some of it?

Cheers for the bursary link, that's definitely worth pursuing :thumsup2

You should get the full 3.5k I think. I basically applied through the uni for the SAAS funding but it took SAAS ages to get back to me so I phoned SAAS directly, spoke to a guy for 5 minutes and he approved it over the phone pretty much there and then as my course was on the list as well. Then you just show the uni finance department the letter/email you get confirming the award and they should just knock it off the cost.

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Aye, I'm in 3rd year. The history department is good and so are the teachers. Been pretty easy so far.

Good stuff. My condition is relatively easy (just one B at Higher) so barring an absolute disaster, I should make it with relative ease. Looking forward to it. Did you stay in halls in 1st year? My sister said I should definitely do it and that's her biggest regret (she also goes to Stirling). Any other posters got any experience of halls in their 1st year?

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Good stuff. My condition is relatively easy (just one B at Higher) so barring an absolute disaster, I should make it with relative ease. Looking forward to it. Did you stay in halls in 1st year? My sister said I should definitely do it and that's her biggest regret (she also goes to Stirling). Any other posters got any experience of halls in their 1st year?

Halls are brilliant, go for it. I stayed in Caley Court for a year and had a great time.

Only down side for you (I'm guessing you'll turn 18 in January or February?) will be the few months without ID to get in clubs and what not. If you have ways round that then you'll have a great time.

There was some 17 year olds in my halls who seemed a bit immature to be living away from home, but they were all girls so you'll be alright. 17 year old girls are all fucking nutters.

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Halls are brilliant, go for it. I stayed in Caley Court for a year and had a great time.

Only down side for you (I'm guessing you'll turn 18 in January or February?) will be the few months without ID to get in clubs and what not. If you have ways round that then you'll have a great time.

There was some 17 year olds in my halls who seemed a bit immature to be living away from home, but they were all girls so you'll be alright. 17 year old girls are all fucking nutters.

Aye, I turn 18 in the January but I have a fake ID so that shouldn't be a problem although I got rejected buying a carry out last week because it was the only form of ID I had - I would imagine most places would ask for a student card along with the ID? If so then I'll be fucked.

Definitely something I'll consider but it seems a bit of an unnecessary expense when I can easily travel to and from Stirling from Cumbernauld. P&B picked the subjects I did for Higher in S5 so it's no big deal if it makes another life choice for me 8)

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If I wasn't sure whether I wanted to live in halls or not I'd take the year out and then decide again. It's your life but put it this way, you won't have nearly as much fun if you don't go to halls.

I don't know what Stirling is like but in my uni our class goes on the piss after exams twice a year, maybe after the last class of the term on top of that. That's it, the rest of the time the people who stay at home and travel in socialise with their own friends back home instead. It doesn't seem like much a change to me, I'd rather be in halls meeting new people and having a brilliant year.

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Aye, I turn 18 in the January but I have a fake ID so that shouldn't be a problem although I got rejected buying a carry out last week because it was the only form of ID I had - I would imagine most places would ask for a student card along with the ID? If so then I'll be fucked.

Definitely something I'll consider but it seems a bit of an unnecessary expense when I can easily travel to and from Stirling from Cumbernauld. P&B picked the subjects I did for Higher in S5 so it's no big deal if it makes another life choice for me 8)

If you do uni while living at home, in my view you're missing out on one of the most important things about uni. Its different for older folk, but for a youngster like you, youll get far more out if uni if you move away!

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I can only echo the above about moving away and halls. It's class(full of terts 8)). f**k living in a town and getting up at 7.00 to travel into some city, when you can wake up at 8.50 and make a 9 o'clock lecture with time to spare. Its pretty much the only reason I went to uni. Which is probably the reason I went out last night, slept through exam today and haven't went to see the lecturer about it, and done absolutely horribly in another exam later on. My attitude is disgusting. I will(almost certainly) be resitting my programming module in the summer, which is alarming seeing as my course is computer science.

So basically don't go to halls if the only reason you are going to uni is to... go to halls. Yeah.

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Yeah, I stayed in halls in first year. It was fucking seriously mental to be honest. Folk going to bed before 5am was a rarity which was alright at the start but I found it to get tiresome after a while. I did live with quite a few bams though, including a couple of guys who were ex pro-youth footballers so that's probably the exception rather than the rule. One of the guys who I'm good mates with now was 17 at the time but since a lot of the bevvying got done in the kitchen he used to just get someone to get him a carry out. There's good intramural football and that as well that you'll be able to join.

You'll enjoy yourself I'd imagine. You already seem a fair bit more mature than some of the folk I stayed with as well so I'm sure you'll get on fine :lol:

The course is seriously so easy in 1st year that its virtually impossible to fail and the grades don't go towards your degree so its basically a year for drinking and fannying about.

Edited by JamboMikey
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Stirling's History department is the poor man's Strathclyde IMO.

Coincidentally, I've actually been reviewing a conference paper submitted from a Stirling post-grad this evening. A staggeringly boring (though well-researched) investigation into the social lives of hick-town communities in Stirlingshire. Struggled to care less about it tbh.

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If you do uni while living at home, in my view you're missing out on one of the most important things about uni. Its different for older folk, but for a youngster like you, youll get far more out if uni if you move away!

While this is in one sense very true, it really does depend on your financial as well as geographic position. Being the beneficiary of a scholarship and bursaries meant I didn't have to get a job, which means that unlike almost everyone who went to halls, I wasn't also spending several periods a week working as well as studying. Even in fourth year I barely had to go into classes for more than a couple of days a week, so it really wasn't a big expense to travel in, and I could piss around with my mates at home most of the week and travel to away games every week. Plus, the financial bonus of not paying for digs each month allowed me to afford a period of study and travel abroad, and actually attain a credible degree at the end of the four years.

Basically, whatever balance of money, location, education and social interaction that prevents you becoming a perma-raging University of Lifer has my endorsement.

Edited by vikingTON
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The course is seriously so easy in 1st year that its virtually impossible to fail and the grades don't go towards your degree so its basically a year for drinking and fannying about.

I remember in 1st year a guy I lived with turned up for a test having been up all night on Methadrone. As we waited for five minutes for the previous class to get out he spent that time pacing up and down the corridor, occasionally sitting down for two seconds before realising he couldn't keep still and getting up. I looked up half way through the test and he was staring at me with bloodshot , panicked eyes, desperate for me to somehow help him get out of that room. In the end he jumped out his seat with twenty minutes remaining and literally ran out the room.

I shit you not, he passed the test convincingly.

Edited by Guest
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If you do uni while living at home, in my view you're missing out on one of the most important things about uni. Its different for older folk, but for a youngster like you, youll get far more out if uni if you move away!

For sure. Even if you do start travelling, you'll end up abandoning your car and sleeping on folks' floors in halls on a regular basis. I had mates that lived in halls just marginally further away than mine at Dundee who slept on my living room floor regularly, and that was a ten minute walk.

Might as well get yourself a bed and a room. If you're travelling, you'll also miss out on the mass-stupidity that is freshers week. Chances are you'll meet some folk that you'll spend the rest of Uni with at that, you'll also miss out of the (oft-looked down upon by older students) opportunities to do the stupid dressing up nights, drunk clothes shopping when you realise its easier to go to Primark than do washing, trying to shag every lassie on your floor (you'll at least get something off them unless you're a monster, my patter is shite and I still got there) and eating everything your parents sent you to Uni with within two days because you're hungover.

I'd fucking love to do Freshers week as a 17 year old again.

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A few of the guys on my course who stayed at home slept on the floor of my flat for at least three nights a week during first year. It was fine during first year since nobody did any work or even attended uni but now they've literally all dropped out.

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