Cant remember if I posted the other day (meant to) but if I was an 18 year old today I’d almost certain do an apprenticeship rather than a generic Uni course. I can understand if someone needs a certain course for a career ie medicine etc but there’s so much cash to be earned from getting a decent trade these days, or money saved by joining schemes run by employers rather than Uni
I’m saying that as someone who loved my time at Uni and have friends from there for life but that was before tuition fees, let alone this talk about more online teaching, which will take away some of the ‘Uni experience’
Depends what you're after of course. Sometimes, careers just don't earn cash...
Online also depends in what context. Not sure having my lectures online would have made any difference! Although the seminars would have been a different kettle of fish.
Said it many times - there's nothing wrong whatsoever in a non career specific degree. In the recent past, IT and finance professionals were hired from English and History, as they had the analytic skills required. The problem has been since commercialising universities, it's devalued a number of degrees, as universities hoover people up for the cash, rather than anything else.
There needs a space where someone's chosen route isn't devalued in comparison to others, whatever it is, a route where work is valued whatever it is, and skills are valued whatever they are, without intellectual snobbery or, reverse snobbery too for that matter. I appreciate human nature will always take over there to some extent, but institutionally we need to start valuing people, rather than titles, better.