James H wrote:So, by your own experience, what exactly qualifies you to say what you've said? Whether they are wasting their time at university or not, they are still getting an education (of some sort).
I can't find any statistics on what kind of commission colleges and sixth forms receive for every student they refer on to university, how many jobs have been created in the public sector (the brainstorming and button-pushing part of it, not the teaching and nursing part) purely to provide employment for graduates who have no hope in the private sector with their media and sociology degrees. Or even whether the government actively uses universities as a recruiting ground for the public sector (as well as using them to manipulate social opinion). But I suspect all of this may be true. The education system nurtures them and then Labour adopts them. Why else would the government want more than 50% of young people to go to university, thereby devaluing degrees and rendering them virtually worthless from the point of view of the private sector? There has to be an ulterior motive.
Aside from my personal conspiracy theory, the other problem with so many people going to university is that one day, A levels and degrees will probably become as expected by private sector employers as GCSEs are now. So it'll be GCSEs that become worthless. This means young people who aren't clever enough for university, or at least to get a few A levels, will have close to no chance of getting a non-manual job - and it's not as if there are many manual jobs left. So that will really sort of the wheat from the chaff. Not exactly the kind of 'progressive' approach you'd expect from Labour, is it.
Also we have an increasing population of OAPs, with a comparative decrease in the amount of young people. 'An education of some sort' is all well and good, but the country would be better off if more young people started working at 18 as opposed to spending four or six years in university and then finally starting work at the age of 24.
James H wrote:I'm about to go to an acting school to do three years' intensive training to come out in uncertain job prospects. Would you say that I'm wasting my time?
I hope you do very well, James.