blue_chameleon
Shake the sauce bottle yo
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- 2003
Unleashed: The end of 'going to Uni'
I think a lot of the problem with universities these days is that they're trying to be all things to all people. This dilutes their worth.
We can't continue to have 37 unis teaching 37 business courses, 37 social science degrees and 30 communication degrees. The notion of branding oneself as being a vocational or elite university is meaningless when seven or eight others do the same.
Opinions?
The article is an bit of a bore imo, but the comments underneath are present some interesting points of discussion.Andrew McGowan's article said:Some readers will remember "going to Uni". This was an experience shared by a small number of Australians, who were academically very able as well as financially secure, or assisted by Government. "Going to Uni" meant participating in an elite experience, where personal connections with peers and sometimes with professors were highly significant; where both cultivation and critique of western and other intellectual traditions and other forms of pure learning were usually entertained, beyond recent fashion or current demand for skills; where the texture of life usually involved other demands or pursuits, whether social activities or social activism, beyond the lectures and the jobs necessary to maintain the mere facts of studying and staying alive.
"Going to Uni" has been languishing for some years, and Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard recently proclaimed the epitaph drafted for it by Professor Denise Bradley's recent Review of higher education in Australia. Part of this proclamation is just the description of reality. As the DPM put it in her speech last week, the changes of the last few decades have seen the transformation of "a tiny, boutique higher education system into first an elite, then a popular, and finally a mass system". "Mass" will mean 40 per cent of Australians completing degrees. Elite, it is not.
Doubtless there are things to mourn about the end of the old model. There is a more profound vision attached to the idea of a "university" than current policies reflect. There is far too little involved in the student experience of many attending Australian institutions of higher learning, beyond their formal classes and qualifications.
"Going to Uni" no longer means anything more than that someone is undertaking a post-secondary course. As the system itself seeks to do more and more, just being in the system will come to mean less and less.
I think a lot of the problem with universities these days is that they're trying to be all things to all people. This dilutes their worth.
We can't continue to have 37 unis teaching 37 business courses, 37 social science degrees and 30 communication degrees. The notion of branding oneself as being a vocational or elite university is meaningless when seven or eight others do the same.
Opinions?
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