There have probably already been many suggestions on student work, but I would like to suggest a few more. Student work should be limited to short-term work, which means that a student can work for one employer for a maximum of 1 year, regardless of the job, i.e. 1 year with one employer. I am a student myself and I notice that in most of the companies where I have worked, they have needed a student virtually all the time, or for a longer period of time, i.e. for more than one year, which to me is the definition of an employment relationship, not student work. Priority must be given to students to enable them to be employed. After one year, the employer would be able to judge whether someone is fit enough to work for his organisation for a long time, rather than being guided by capital alone. We students will not go to the courts to demand an employment relationship from an employer, there is case law on this and I think we could legislate for this. I think that what is more important here are the rights that people have to be able to make a home, to have a family and to live on a decent wage. Student work is often paid less than the minimum wage and the work is more demanding. I would also like to quote your reaction to student work: 'This is not to neglect the social corrective function, in the case of students with a low socio-economic status, or the possibility for students to improve their socio-economic status according to their own abilities. It is too bad that students have to improve their socio-economic situation in this way, that they work for low wages and are dependent on their parents, because the priority is still the economic interest in profit. I think that human rights, development, creating a home and a family are more important than corporate profits and should be prioritised by the state. The statistics are terrible. By the age of 30 and even longer at home, because we work for little money in the interests of capital. Buying status because you can't get jobs etc... I myself have been working through the student service for 6 years and I am in continuous education, I started working as a high school student. What I feel is exploitation. After 6 years of work I have gained work experience, I work for myself because I can't do it any other way, but I do the work for a shameful wage. I would love to have a regular job but employers don't recognise student experience.... We are in a vicious circle until the age of 30. And by the time we're 30, we won't have a job, we won't get housing loans, we won't have children, we won't pay taxes... Ultimately, we are the burden of our parents and the state because we cannot become independent on our own. The state should pass this burden on to employers who have cheap labour (students doing long-term work) and high profits.