Cornwall College sets tuition fees below university average


In a drive to make higher education more accessible Cornwall College has set the ceiling on its annual tuition fees at £6000.

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The college’s decision means that students starting university-level courses in 2012 will pay £3000 less in tuition fees than the £9000 maximum allowed by government.  

Many West Country universities will be charging students the highest possible annual tuition fee, including Devon’s University of Plymouth and the University of Exeter. Cornwall College Chief Executive Officer, Dave Linnell, said: Setting our tuition fees at £6000 a year will enable those wanting a high quality university-level education to receive it at an affordable rate. Our students are our priority and we want higher education to continue to be accessible to everyone and provide real opportunities in employment.”

Cornwall College is the biggest education provider in Cornwall, one of the largest colleges in the UK and offers university level courses from Tourism, Business and Health to Forensic Science, Engineering and Renewable Energy.  Dave Linnell said. “Students choose to study higher education at our colleges because of the quality of the courses and the excellent level of student support.  Contact with staff is higher than in many institutions and leads to an excellent relationship between staff and students.” 

Cornwall College is part of the Combined Universities in Cornwall

What are other universities charging?

Shrinking glaciers´ shifting ocean currents


University of Sheffield and Bangor University scientists have used computer climate modelling to study how fresh water entering the oceans 140,000 years ago affected ocean currents that control climate.

Glacier

The research, co-authored by Professor Grant Bigg, Head of the University of Sheffield's Department of Geography, PhD student Clare Green, and Dr Mattias Green, a Senior Research fellow at Bangor University's School of Ocean Sciences, found that freshwater entering the ocean from melting ice sheets can weaken the climate controlling part of the large-scale ocean circulation, with dramatic climate change as a consequence.

During the period of the study, the experts noted that the global temperature dropped by up to two degrees over a few centuries, but changes were not uniform over the planet, and it took a long time for the climate to recover after the ice sheets had melted completely.

"With meltwater- similar to adding water to your drink, the water spreads out quickly and has an immediate effect, but it is also absorbed quickly into the rest of the ocean. In a similar way to your ice cube, the icebergs drift along and melt more slowly. This means the immediate impact is weaker, but they are there for a longer time and distribute the water over a larger area," Dr Mattias Green from Bangor University, said:

The team argues that it is not only the volume of freshwater being released from the melting ice sheet which is important, but also the state of the freshwater. The scientists claim that icebergs act to reduce the ocean circulation less than meltwater, but the effects of icebergs last for longer periods of time. The effect is similar to the difference between adding very cold water to a drink or adding an ice cube or two.

The study also shows that at the end of the more recent Ice Age 20,000 years ago, the ocean circulation was more sensitive to ice sheet collapses than during the earlier period.

Professor Grant Bigg, Head of the University of Sheffield's Department of Geography, said: "An important component of the work is that it shows that the impact of freshwater releases from past, or future, ice masses depends critically on the form - whether fresh water or icebergs - and the location of the release."

"The Arctic has been surrounded by extensive glaciations several times in the past and this study has shown that large-scale changes in such Arctic ice sheets could affect the climate in places far from the release site. Our work also suggests that the Pacific Ocean may have been more sensitive to major changes in past glaciations than previously realised. We plan to investigate this possibility more in the future."

"Our results lead us to conclude that a future ice sheet collapse, that might happen in Antarctica or Greenland, would have climatic consequences, but the exact impact needs to be evaluated in each case,"  Dr Mattias Green said.

The research paper is  currently featured as an Editor's Highlight in top US journal, Paleoceanography. The study is the first of this kind for the time period.