bob - // Yes its a bit of a stretch and not the main problem but hes got a good genral point- we'er encouraging far to many to go who are'nt right for uni and would be better learning a trade. In fact am sure alot of children from age 14-18 would be better off doing trades like bricklaying, joinery rather than GCSEs and sixth form. //
Absolutely - Blair's nonsensical ambition for fifty per cent of school leavers to go to university was motivated by exactly the same thinking as Boris's obsession with cycle lanes - a personal crusade based entirely on personal experience, and having absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with reality.
When you consider that the drop-out rate for students in their first year is around one third - and that's students who actually did want to go to university, it should be abundantly clear to anyone who actually looks at the issue realistically, that university is not the holy grail it was in the 1960's, and the notion that a degree is a golden pathway to riches and security has long been exposed for the complete myth it always was.
Education should be about finding potential occupations that actually suit the students being steered towards them, and for the vast majority, that is not further education and academia, it is practical skills that will enable them to find work regularly throughout their lifetime.
From my experience, finding a graduate with no skills whatsoever in trhe real world, is like finding a grain of sand on a beach, but finding an electrician who can visit in the next three months is like finding life on Mars - potentially possible, but don''t hold your breath.
The ludicrous system that allows universities to make money depending on the number of admissions should be scrapped, since it makes them take anyone and everyone, however manifestly unsuitable they are.
Education needs reform from top to bottom, but reform costs money, and they are only interested in making money, so no chance there.