Religion and Ethics Forum

General Category => Politics & Current Affairs => Topic started by: Nearly Sane on September 20, 2018, 01:57:45 PM

Title: 'Mis-sold, expensive and overhyped: why our universities are a con'
Post by: Nearly Sane on September 20, 2018, 01:57:45 PM

Agree with a lot of this.


https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/sep/20/university-factory-failed-tony-blair-social-mobility-jobs
Title: Re: 'Mis-sold, expensive and overhyped: why our universities are a con'
Post by: Harrowby Hall on September 20, 2018, 06:38:37 PM
Quote
For two decades, Westminster has used universities as its magic answer for social mobility. Ministers did so with the connivance of highly paid vice-chancellors, and in the process they have trashed much of what was good about British higher education. What should be sites for speculative inquiry and critical thinking have instead turned into businesses that speculate on property deals, criticise academics who aren’t publishing in the right journals – and fail spectacularly to engage with the serious social and economic problems that confront the UK right now. As for the graduates, they largely wind up taking the same place in the queue as their parents – only this time with an expensive certificate detailing their newfound expertise.

All this, and something else, too:

In a stroke, undergraduates ceased to be students - they became customers ...