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So many students have pilled up bills to sort, and most of them don't have helping hands. Can working in a survey site help them?
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SignUp Now!you are very right surveys can give you not bad money but you need to live in the right location even then you might won't able to make anything good so you also need to have a jobMay be if they have good paying survey platforms and if they work constantly all day long, may be they may have some money to cover only few bills, but i don't think it will be enough to pay all bills.
Indeed, getting money from online work is bit smaller than we need, so having a job is mandatory to pay fees and bills that we have.you are very right surveys can give you not bad money but you need to live in the right location even then you might won't able to make anything good so you also need to have a job
If you are a student and meanwhile cannot count on a discreetly paid job, even if you live in the right location, it won't help. Students and, worse, housewife and unemployed, are considered the worst target by companies and they get disqualified even when they live in a top tier country. Sorry to disappoint, but I personally experienced such a mishap when I was living in south Europe. Disqualifications where even worse than now: I live in a third world country, but I run a small business.you are very right surveys can give you not bad money but you need to live in the right location even then you might won't able to make anything good so you also need to have a job
I can easily answer because I come from a geographic area (my former country, specifically) where the condition of worker-students is very, very common. In the north-west of my former country, parents aren't compromised with children's education, so they are forced to pay their own university bills (or better said: tuition fees and the cost of the books). It's not electricity, heating and water bills in their home, but they must pay all have to do with their education. This is the principal reason in my former area we didn't have but a few doctors whose origin is that area. My former region needs doctors from the south of the country, as students in the south don't need to pay any bills: their parents are different from parents in the north-west of the country. And yes: in my former region, students graduate completely baked and, of course, very outside prescribed years.What are the bills students supposed to pay? What about their parents? How could they concentrate on their studies when they work online hard? They might graduate half baked.
That's interesting, but in my country, the parents support their children's education unless their kids pass the exams for scholarships. Colleges and universities government-owned are tuition-free. There are many scholarships like CHED with a $ 1000 allowance a semester.I can easily answer because I come from a geographic area (my former country, specifically) where the condition of worker-students is very, very common. In the north-west of my former country, parents aren't compromised with children's education, so they are forced to pay their own university bills (or better said: tuition fees and the cost of the books). It's not electricity, heating and water bills in their home, but they must pay all have to do with their education. This is the principal reason in my former area we didn't have but a few doctors whose origin is that area. My former region needs doctors from the south of the country, as students in the south don't need to pay any bills: their parents are different from parents in the north-west of the country. And yes: in my former region, students graduate completely baked and, of course, very outside prescribed years.
More or less like my current country. The big Mercosur countries provide public education for free, including books (primary school and High School students also receive food and transportation for free, in the case of transportation if the families are very poor). In any way, a university student can easily have the need to bring a salary at home, so he/she works and studies here too. But in my former country it's really worse, as even the public education is very expensive, starting with primary school. There are governmental taxes to let your children access to schools (until families aren't so poor to get exempted from taxes), books are very expensive since the last 3 primary years and each university year can cost thousands of euros.That's interesting, but in my country, the parents support their children's education unless their kids pass the exams for scholarships. Colleges and universities government-owned are tuition-free. There are many scholarships like CHED with a $ 1000 allowance a semester.
They are pitiful but they can still survive with their own initiative and perseverance. Let us hope the previous country will have a better change.More or less like my current country. The big Mercosur countries provide public education for free, including books (primary school and High School students also receive food and transportation for free, in the case of transportation if the families are very poor). In any way, a university student can easily have the need to bring a salary at home, so he/she works and studies here too. But in my former country it's really worse, as even the public education is very expensive, starting with primary school. There are governmental taxes to let your children access to schools (until families aren't so poor to get exempted from taxes), books are very expensive since the last 3 primary years and each university year can cost thousands of euros.
That sounds very unfortunate! I feel sorry for the children from North-west of your former country who can't pursue their dreams and aspirations because of the background they come from. Talent and dreams are not confined to any particular region or to any social economic status. What is the status of education loan there? Is there any option for a cheaper one?Unfortunately, students in my former country can't rely on surveys at all. Students are among the worst target from the point of view of companies, so they get around 90% of disqualification. In addition, the online amount a student can earn doesn't overcome 20 or 30 euros per month. And tuition fees in my former country cost thousands of euros per year, out of expensive books. Impossible to cover such expenses if the student hasn't an ordinary offline job. And that's the reason why in the north-west of my former country a lot of the doctors come from the south of the country, as parents in the south have a good disposition to support their children while they study: southern people are eager to provide a better future for their children and they are happy if they want to be doctors, while in the north-west parents are mostly happy with children workmen and cleaning maids as they begin to bring a salary at home very soon.
First of all, in my former country, student loans simply don't exist. And the very same culture of my former country is against loans. It's because when you can't repay a loan, it begins a true persecution: it's trials, condemnations to pay late interests and in the case the origin of the loan is governmental, R.S.I. starts a seizure that won't cease until you have paid the last penny: first of all your car (if you have one). Then, the 20% of your salary (if you have a job). If you don't have a car nor a job, R.S.I will start a seizure in the future, as soon as you have. That's why my fellow citizens hate loans so much and students' loan doesn't exist. A student who can't pursue his/her dreams runs after whatever job quickly. Better said: in the north-west of my former country, students get rid of their dreams very quickly, if families don't support them and a job opportunity appears. The status of education is what I toldsaid about: doctors are imported from the south of the country. And not only doctors: judges, prosecutors, policemen and many teachers are imported from the south too, as my fellow citizens easily become workmen and insurers for shabby companies.That sounds very unfortunate! I feel sorry for the children from North-west of your former country who can't pursue their dreams and aspirations because of the background they come from. Talent and dreams are not confined to any particular region or to any social economic status. What is the status of education loan there? Is there any option for a cheaper one?