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In the UK, students' residence halls are run as profit-making business, but this can occasionally be to students' disadvantage.
As many universities choose to contract out their hall's management to private companies, room rents are rising and student rights are suffering.
In 2006, 55 percent of student rooms were managed by private companies-only 27 percent by universities and colleges, the National Union of Students(NUS)has reported.
These private companies are improving the hall's facilities in return for higher room rents.The most noticeable example of this trend is the growth in luxury halls.These are halls for students willing to pay more for larger rooms with better services.
Chancellors Court, at Edinburgh University in Scotland, is one such luxury hall.Rooms are divided between standard and large, with larger rooms costing 173 pounds each week, 40 pounds more than smaller rooms.They come with a scenic view, color TV, fast Internet connection and a modern bathroom.
Other luxury halls have private gyms for their residents.Private companies capitalize(用…以牟利)on their investment by renting out the students rooms to travelers over the summer vacation period.
But the NUS is concerned that luxury halls are affecting room rents at standard un-privatized halls.Most students in the UK pay on average 126 pounds a week for a private room in catered(提供餐飲的)halls of residence, the International Students Advice and Welfare organization has reported.According to the NUS, rent in UK halls of residence has risen by almost a quarter from 2005 to 2007.
Veronica King, NUS vice-president of welfare, wants the privatization of university accommodation to stop.
“For the students for whom luxury is not affordable, there is a significant risk that accommodation costs, coupled with the burden of complete fees, may reduce the choice of where to go to university,”she said.
Legal quarrels with privatized(私有化了的)halls may also account for some of the 10 percent per year rise in student complaints to the office of the Independent Adjudicator(裁定者)for Higher Education(OIA).The OIA is an independent student complaints scheme that has authority over all higher education institutions in England and Wales.
Rob Behrens, chief executive of the OIA, said he was unsurprised by the rise in complaints.“The bottom line is that students today are more self-confident in thinking about what their rights are and what are the things they can get form the commitments they make.”