| University 'non-courses' attacked |
|
|
|
Hundreds of university "non-courses" should be abolished as a waste of public money, a group campaigning for lower taxes has said. A report from the Taxpayers' Alliance highlighted 401 such courses starting this autumn in the UK, which it said cost £40m a year to run. But the vice-chancellors' organisation Universities UK accused it of a "rag bag of prejudices". It said courses were over-subscribed and graduates much in demand. The TaxPayers' Alliance report said the courses "lend the respectability of scholarly qualifications to non-academic subjects". The training they offered would be better learned on the job, it suggested. The report had a "top five" of target courses:
Author Peter Cuthbertson said: "Political priorities have led to a never-ending drive to increase the number of students in university. "As a result, there has been a massive expansion of 'non-degrees' of little or no academic merit. "The government has failed in its pledge to abolish 'Mickey Mouse' degrees. "If 'non-courses' were abolished, all the other students could save over £100 on their tuition fees or buy an extra pint of beer a week." Demand from employers But Universities UK said the alliance had failed to understand developments in higher education or the labour market. "Had they done a little more research, they would have found that these so-called 'non-courses' are in fact based on demand from employers and developed in association with them," a spokesman said. "Graduates on these courses are in demand from employers who are looking for people with specific skills alongside the general skills acquired during a degree such as critical-thinking, team-working, time-management and IT skills - a point lost on the authors of this rag-bag of prejudices and outdated assumptions. "Students know this - which is why these courses are often over-subscribed and have high employability rates." He said golf management - one of the courses derided by the alliance - involved business, management and accounting as well as practical experience at golf courses. "This is academic snobbery, as predictable as it is unfounded." Courtesy: BBC News
|
No comment posted
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
| National News |
| Asia & Region |
| Technology |
| Travel & Business |
| Sports |
| Entertainment |
| Health |
| Education |
| Reports & Analysis |
| Fashion & Beauty |
| World |
| Science & Nature |