Children’s education is expensive. In some countries, governments pay partly or all education fees. Do the advantages outweigh the disadvantages?

In some areas around the world, the
authorities
have played a responsibility to allocate part of the funding to support
education
for the younger generations recently, by paying partly or all
fees
. For
this
purpose,
education
is not cheaper.
While
the approach offers a host of merits, it is not without its demerits.
This
essay will weigh the advantages and disadvantages. 
To begin
with, one of the compelling merits of allocating money to children's
education
is that decreases
parents
' economic
burden
.
This
is because
education
spending occupies a large proportion of family spending. Especially, if some
parents
would like their children to get a first-class
education
, that means these types of families definitely spend money to pay the
fees
for
education
;
hence
, if local governments can pay partly or all
education
fees
, it is an effective method to help
parents
'
burden
.
Furthermore
, it can allow local
authorities
to get more supporters, and it improves the success rate of the presidential election. Particularly in democratic countries.
This
is because governments can get more votes from parent
groups
who getting profit from the
policy
which pays partly or all
education
fees
. After all, the approach is constructive for an official institution that wants to get a successful election.
Nevertheless
, it does cause the government's economic
burden
to increase. Meanwhile, the tax
burden
of every citizen will increase, because the funding of governments comes from individual tax policies.
Moreover
, an increasing number of individual taxes may cause other
groups
' complaints and dissatisfaction about the
authorities
'
policy
.
For example
, DINKY couples may not support the
policy
that funds
education
fees
. In short, local
authorities
may lose part vote from DINKY
groups
. The gist of the matter is that allocating funding to
education
fees
has its pros and cons.
While
benefiting
parents
by relieving their economic
burden
, the government can get more votes from
parents
group.
However
, the
policy
may impair other
groups
' profit. Ergo, it is arduous to arbiter whether advantages outweigh disadvantages or not.
Submitted by lyutingting520 on

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Include an introduction and conclusion

A conclusion is essential for IELTS writing task 2. It is more important than most people realise. You will be penalised for missing a conclusion in your IELTS essay.

The easiest paragraph to write in an essay is the conclusion paragraph. This is because the paragraph mostly contains information that has already been presented in the essay – it is just the repetition of some information written in the introduction paragraph and supporting paragraphs.

The conclusion paragraph only has 3 sentences:

  • Summary
  • Restatement of thesis
  • Prediction or recommendation

Example:

To summarize, a robotic teacher does not have the necessary disciple to properly give instructions to students and actually works to retard the ability of a student to comprehend new lessons. Therefore, it is clear that the idea of running a classroom completely by a machine cannot be supported. After thorough analysis on this subject, it is predicted that the adverse effects of the debate over technology-driven teaching will always be greater than the positive effects, and because of this, classroom teachers will never be substituted for technology.

Start your conclusion with a linking phrase. Here are some examples:

  • In conclusion
  • To conclude
  • To summarize
  • Finally
  • In a nutshell
  • In general

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Topic Vocabulary:
  • access to education
  • financial burden
  • education quality
  • equal opportunities
  • investment in human capital
  • economic development
  • cost burden
  • misuse of funds
  • motivation
  • perform well
  • limited choice
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