| Taxpayers' Alliance and worthless courses |
|
| Written by Dr Madsen Pirie | |
| Tuesday, 21 August 2007 | |
|
The Taxpayers' Alliance have been making waves with Peter Cuthbertson's report on university 'non-courses." Widely covered by the BBC
and major newspapers, the report highlights 401 such courses, which it
says cost £40m a year to run. For its top five it picks out
Author Peter Cuthbertson says that political priorities have
driven governments to increase the numbers attending university, and
"As a result, there has been a massive expansion of 'non-degrees' of
little or no academic merit." His findings have been attacked by
Universities UK, who report that the so-called non-courses were
provided in response to demand, and are in fact over-subscribed. Well,
yes, but could that be because they are easier? Just as some students
are going for less demanding A-levels, might they not also be choosing
easier degree courses?
Bookmark
Comments (0)
![]() Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.
|