Not all student are idle scrotes, but there are plenty who do fall into that category.
The hard-working ones were probably still in lectures while 'that lot' were smashing up private property and having a jolly good laugh...
I was a student too: plenty of us here on TP attended college or university - we know that those places, especially on arts-based courses are stacked to the rafters with complete no-hopers who'll never get a job in industry.
To support myself I had two part-time jobs and enlisted in the TA to make ends meet.
Of those that attended Uni with me, none bar myself ever made anything like the impact on the photographic world we'd hoped to (and any impact I've made is almost unnoticable as well...). Two of the fifteen from my year became professional photographers, either full or part-time.
Our sister courses: graphic design and fashion design produced even fewer people making into their respective industries, judging from my Facebook and Freinds Reunited pages.
Arts courses are a nice, soft, cushy way of avoiding having to think about the real world for a few years while you weigh up your options. Being 'creative' is in vogue at the moment.
Someone here mentioned architects: my brother studied at Brighton Uni and 15 years on, he's the only one from his graduating year working in architecture in any way at all...
Not because they're not qualified, but because they can't be bothered once they realise what hard work is required to actually make it happen in the real world...
it's easier to get into Uni than it is to get a proper job and that's why Uni is such an attractive option.
Well sorry but Uni now looks like it's going to reflect the realities of life outside the halls of academia. Pay your way and work harder.