i'd like to see the govt give free college education to everyone, why not, like most other european states seem to be able to do just fine (even denmark, germany, france, who happily encourage half of their students to pursue technical or polytechnic qualifications, often to post-graduate level). i'd like to see the government enforce a realistic expectation of university attendance/attainment and then provide funding for this contingent - say, 20% of all youngsters to attend a 'proper' university for traditional courses of academic instruction, with 20% more to do technical/polytechnic degrees that are kept separate. don't confuse each type of qualification (degree/diploma) and fund/channel each set of students onto their own career paths, with realistic expectations of those paths. with a manageable and realistic number of students going into full-tuition university education (20% at the £9k a year), this would be much easier to apportion funds to, rather than encouraging a vague mass of new labour specified "50% of all youths into university", which creates a situation where the vast majority of students are doing shit courses at shit universities but are still taking full-whack loans. this doesn't profit anyone: the individual student, the government, nor employers who will throw away their application.
free university education is entirely possible. all you have to do is become a little firmer with what the definition of a 'degree education' really is (read: actual standards of admission, only intaking actually studious and intellectual types to 'real' universities). right now degree-level education has been held up as a bit of a new labour era ideal, something ideal in that it was precisely vague and not thought out, encouraging everyone to trot along and get a degree - of any sort - so long as that degree would 'automatically' somehow translate into middle-class socialization and professional-level employment (it patently does not). free university education is fundable so long as it doesn't have to involve funding any idiot that can get 2 D's at a-level to attend any bunk college. restrict the numbers, fund the ones who are actually going to learn something and then have the realistic potential of joining a 'degree-educated' class of citizen/workers. that way you can start talking about government funding of higher-education in terms of 'future investment' again, with it actually meaning something, rather than a cash-sink where a bunch of dim people study catering at a post-1992 midlands polytechnic for 4 years, with no hope of ever remunerating the government or economy with their career prospects.
of course all that involves the reformation of pre-university education, so that everyone has the same hypothetical chance of attaining the level of education and knowledge to gain admission to 'more rigorous' universities. something the UK seems singularly incapable of right now, with the tory ideologue educational ministers all intent on 'reforming' the system so that it becomes more victorian and class-stratified than ever. even taking two steps back from the former grammar school system, which at least promoted some social mobility and access. disgraceful. though those tory idiots should have no problem getting over the labour-era whimsy of conflating 'universities' with 'polytechnics'; gove et al should have no shame about re-separating the two types of institution, and getting over the labour-era embarrassment that a polytechnic is not a university, and never will be - and should never even manage itself or aim to be like one.
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-08 08:03:31)