Linford
Guest
When I started out, vocational training was more easily accessable than HE (or so it seemed) back in the mid 80's. You could go down the job centre, and either get a job, or get on a waiting list to co and do a course which would give you skills to get you into a job at the end (I did the skillcentre route and got into engineering as a machinist), learned the business from the bottom of the pile, and then retrained into the offices on the designing side of things (not better or worse than the shop floor as they are very skilled out there, and that takes years to master but different).
Then it all changed, Maggie throttled manufacturing (or so it seemed), and declared that the country could survive by just offering banking services to the rest of the world.
Education, Education, Education became the mantra after the grey years of Major, and everyone (and their kids) were sold the idea that they could go to college, and come out with a qualification which gauranteed them a job where they'd earn a massive salary and never have to do a job involving manual labour again.
And then it all went a bit wrong and now there is a sizeable proportion of the people of employable age who are 'economically inactive'
Do we have to reinvent ourselves again to survive by looking to the past and training our youngsters to do manual labour (and be happy with that), or should we all become a nation of degree educated people which the nation may, or may not have the ability to offer gainful employment too as this is what made the country 'great' back in the day.
Is Education, Educatio, Education a failed experiment which should have only ever remained in the hands of the people who have gotthe ability to actually do well at it. There is a hell of a lot of people now who are flipping burgers with £30k-£40k of student debt who will never be able to find employment in their chosen field as they just didn't achieve anything of value in their courses.
Then it all changed, Maggie throttled manufacturing (or so it seemed), and declared that the country could survive by just offering banking services to the rest of the world.
Education, Education, Education became the mantra after the grey years of Major, and everyone (and their kids) were sold the idea that they could go to college, and come out with a qualification which gauranteed them a job where they'd earn a massive salary and never have to do a job involving manual labour again.
And then it all went a bit wrong and now there is a sizeable proportion of the people of employable age who are 'economically inactive'

Do we have to reinvent ourselves again to survive by looking to the past and training our youngsters to do manual labour (and be happy with that), or should we all become a nation of degree educated people which the nation may, or may not have the ability to offer gainful employment too as this is what made the country 'great' back in the day.
Is Education, Educatio, Education a failed experiment which should have only ever remained in the hands of the people who have gotthe ability to actually do well at it. There is a hell of a lot of people now who are flipping burgers with £30k-£40k of student debt who will never be able to find employment in their chosen field as they just didn't achieve anything of value in their courses.
