Click to start... Click to start.... October/November? As soon as you get to Oxford Brookes? As soon...

Preview:

Citation preview

pREveNTING Nightmares

Housing Quiz!Click to

start...

When should you decide who you are going to live

with next year?

October/November?

As soon as you get to Oxford Brookes?

Semester two ( i.e. February)?

No.Deciding your group too early leads to all

sorts of problems.

You have only known these people a few weeks and are unlikely to still want to live

with them by next year!

(Trust us we see this year after year )

Try again!

Correct!

You are very wise to wait deciding who to live with too early causes

many problems later on.

You might have changed your mind about them next month!

Next question

What is the VERY FIRST thing to consider when thinking about renting for next

year?

How much can you afford to pay in rent each month.

Where the nearest pub/club is.

Where the closest bus stop is.

Who you are going to live with.

Correct!If you can’t afford it don’t sign the contract! You may have to change your group if

they can afford more than you!

Next Question

Not a good idea!

It is MUCH more important to think about how much rent you can afford first!

Try again

This is worth thinking about but it is MUCH more important to think about how much rent you can afford!

Try again!

Where can you get an electronic spreadsheet that

will allow you to calculate how much money you can spend?

Your Mum.

Student Finance England.

The Students’ Union Advice Centre.

The Prime Minister.

No!Not unless she is an

Excel genius (which she might be...)

Try Again

No, definitely not!

Try Again

Correct! Have a look at our

Facebook page, the Wealth Checker tool is on the Advice Centre page

“OxfordBrookesSU”

Next question

No can do. He’s having money problems of his

own at the moment.

Try again

When is the perfect time to start house hunting?

February.

As soon as you arrive in September.

When it is sunny.

When you don’t have a hangover.

Yes! Taking your time before committing yourself to a

legally binding contract, that is hard to get out of, will save you a lot of headaches later.

Next Question

Don’t go house hunting until February.

You need to wait until you know that you have passed your first

semester!!! and that you still like your future housemates enough to live with them

Try again.

Sunny always helps, but that’s not the right

answer...

Try again!

Not having a hangover is a good idea, this is a huge

decision and should not be taken lightly.

But that’s not the right answer...

Try Again!

What is the optimum number of people to share a house with?

Ten! Party house!

One other person.

Four.

No.Really bad idea.

More people = more complications.

Try again!

Might work but two bed places are hard to

come by and expensive.

Try again!

Yes! This is a good number and less likely to

cause problems later (although we cannot

guarantee this )

Next Question

What problems can you encounter when living

others?Disagreements on how to live in your house. e.g.

cleanliness, putting out bins etc.

Housemates may drop out leaving you liable for the rent.

Some might not pay the rent, and you could be liable for it all.

Other housemates may want to party while you want to sleep.

All of the above.

Correct.

Happens all the time.

Next Question

Correct.

The more people you live with, the more you

increase your chances of something going wrong.

Next Question

What have you created when you sign a tenancy agreement?

A legally binding agreement that you cannot easily get out of without financial penalty.

A mess.

It means nothing it is just a scribble on a bit of paper.

A work of art.

Correct.Signing a contract means

that you are tied in for the period stated on the

contract.Think really hard before signing

anything.

Next Question

It can end up that way if it all goes wrong.

Try again!

Try again!

Wrong!A contract is a legally binding document.

Hmmm. Never seen a contract that fitted that description. Come to the

Advice Centre for a contract check and we will

explain it all to you.

Try again!

Who do the letting agents work for?

Me.

The landlord.

The Government.

Themselves.

No.

Try again!

Yes and no! The letting agents actually work for the landlord, but sometimes

the letting agent IS the landlord.

Try again!

Correct! Letting agents are working for

the landlord, not the tenant (although a good agent will value their tenants most do

not!)

Escape the nightmare...

1. Book now to come to one of our

talks...there are prizes to be won!

2.Please sign our petition to letting

agents asking them to stop renting in semester one.

Before you go, please book our place at one of

our talks and sign our petition!

The SU advice Team

E: suadvice@brookes.ac.uk Tel: 01865 484770

Recommended