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Friday, 21 July 2023

Signal and Noise

The government has proposed to "crack down on rip-off university degrees". This means that courses with "poor outcomes" - measured in terms of dropouts, low ensuing employment rates and wages, and high initial costs and student debt - will have their enrollments capped. Inevitably exceptions will be made for strategically important courses, like medicine and engineering, and no one seriously expects the measure to affect the Russell Group. This is clearly about reducing access to higher education in the service of class prejudice as much as reducing costs to the Exchequer, hence the positive reception in the Tory press after years during which columnists who did Classics or PPE at Oxford have insisted that we must do away with "mickey mouse" degrees along with the divisive nonsense of critical theory. Whether this latest initiative will actually amount to much, or is simply another culture war spasm, only time will tell. But what I want to concentrate on here is not the all-too-obvious motivations of a Conservative government in its death-throes but rather the nature of the criticism that has been levelled at it. This has predominantly rested on a dichotomy of the instrumental and the cultural: the claim that the government know the price of everything and the value of nothing.

The state cannot help but think of university education in instrumental terms, specifically the contribution of trained graduates to the economy, just as it necessarily thinks of healthcare in terms of maximising and reproducing the labour force. That this should put it at odds with those who adopt an aesthetic defence - that education is a good in itself - is in no way surprising, but it also does not mean that the government of the day is therefore philistine, as many of its critics have suggested. Likewise it does not mean that those advocating the civilising qualities of study are not free of snobbery and prejudice. One grimly amusing aspect of the criticism has been the emphasis on the democratic nature of higher education: that it should be available to all and that in capping courses we are discriminating against students from poorer and minority backgrounds. But higher education in the UK has never been (and probably never will be) available to all and it remains (and probably will remain) a social hierarchy in which the poor and minorities are systematically disadvantaged.

The suggestion that the government should adopt a more holistic approach, committing to increase gross national happiness rather than just gross national product, sounds nice but it runs up against this very problem: that higher education in the UK is selective and exclusive (consider the regular anxiety over "grade inflation"). The traditional justification for this was that educating a minority of the population in expert roles was a positive contribution to society as whole - more doctors, teacher, engineers etc - with the implicit understanding that progressive income taxation would recyle some of the financial rewards accruing to further education into the public treasury for general benefit, including the funding of future access for the disadvantaged. As tax solidarity has declined since the 1970s, and as the introduction of tuition fees has put a very public price on higher education (albeit misleadingly as the actual cost to the public treasury of training a BSc in Engineering is not the same as a BA in French), the emphasis has shifted increasingly to the idea of societal contribution, and that has served to turn up the volume of attacks on courses whose utility is not instrumentally obvious, like critical studies. 

The irony is that if the government were truly instrumental then it would be pushing for greater state direction of education and explicit planning of courses and numbers to feed into a larger economic plan. But the contemporary state does not do that sort of planning. Consequently, the space is inevitably filled by the market - i.e. delegated, diffuse planning in which price signals (e.g. earnings post-graduation for different courses) are meant to work their magic, even though the evidence to date, for example the way that every university promptly chose to charge the maximum in tuition fees after these were raised after 2010, is that there is no actual market. That universities become businesses and students become consumers is simply the logic of this planning absence but it doesn't mean that either behave as such: the businesses don't actually compete and the consumers don't actually decline inadequate offers and take their custom elsewhere. If a student switches from one course to another, or even to another institution, that isn't taken as a judgement on the supplier but on the consumer.


One reason why the market approach doesn't work in practice is that only a small minority of students have a clear career objective, and they are the ones least likely to respond to price signals. If you're determined to be an electrical engineer and want to study at a particular college, you're not going to prefer another university simply because it is 5% cheaper, and you're certainly not going to switch to studying Russian at that first collge because it's on special offer. Not only do many 18-year olds have no idea what career they will pursue, the uncertainty of the future means that they cannot be sure whether a particular degree will still be as relevant and financially rewarding tomorrow as it is today. Beyond the class prejudice and anti-intellectualism, a lot of the contemporary chat about "low-value courses" reflects the wider anxiety over the future impact of technology on job prospects and wages - e.g. that AI will do away with writing so studying English or journalism is a dead-end. The future is unknowable so we should not expect teenagers to be clairvoyant.

The disproportionate impact of the course cap on poor and minority students is evidence of the failure of the strategy of university expansion that commenced in the 1990s. As William Davies noted, "The wider ideological problem is that, for politicians of all parties in the post-Thatcher era, the education system has carried the burden of sustaining the illusion of a classless society". This burden was always going to be insupportable because of the insistence that the state's involvement be limited to arranging the financing while the higher education market would efficiently allocate resources. Instead of directly intervening to remove the class and racial biases in the admissions process, the state allowed the university sector to continue with discriminatory selection, which has had the effect of creating a "ghetto" of courses (and institutions - i.e. the non-Russell Group polyversities) where low regard was a self-fulfilling prophecy. The government's eventual "crackdown" was baked in from the start.

The conservative antipathy towards universities, particularly in the claims that students are intolerant and academics are pushing divisive nonsense, isn't simply the seasoning of the charge that they are "ripping off" the younger generation. It is rather part of a more thoroughgoing critique that believes universities should not only be elitist institutions but that they should inculcate a particular worldview (the Western canon of literature and art, for example). But this goes against their nominal commitment to the market. If the consumers, i.e. students, want a woke education then that is what universities should provide. Likewise, there is a conflict between the idea that universities should return to a more elitist curriculum and the attacks on the metropolitan elite who were educated in it. What conservatives actually want to do is plan further education, not only in terms of numbers per subject but in the enforcement of norms of behaviour among students: it is a demand for an authoritarian education system, not a tweak in the market. That's the signal; the hysteria over free-speech is simply the noise.

Similarly, the critics of the government are not sincere in their calls for education for all, and few of them would back a genuinely meritocratic approach in which high-status institutions take the brightest and best candidates from across the country rather than disproportionately selecting from private schools. If they really believed in a democratic approach then they would support UBI, giving everyone the choice to pursue further education or training at any point in their lifetime and with any supplier but not obliging them to pursue it in a particular way or at a particular time, unlike the Liberal Democrat's  proposed "skills wallet" and similar schemes do. Likewise a commitment to a more inclusive education system would see the admissions process flipped so that ranking by schools determined access rather than selection by universities (i.e. a "bog-standard" comprehensive in Slough would get 10 places across the Russell Group each year and so would Eton College). What the government's critics actually want to do is maintain the status quo. That's the signal; the hysteria over philistinism is simply the noise.

6 comments:

  1. a "bog-standard" comprehensive in Slough would get 10 places across the Russell Group each year and so would Eton College

    I support this, but if you could somehow get this through Parliament what would it achieve?

    This solution assumes that all the prestigious jobs that would have gone to the Etonians with Russell Group degrees will now go the comprehensive school kids with Russell Group degrees. Instead the wealth and connections of the Etonians will realign in some fashion to allow privileged access to opportunities. For example whatever degree you get your best chance in media is to do unpaid work placements in London for a long time.

    A better solution is to make the places at Russell Group universities tradeable. So there are 10 Russell Group places for the 10 best A level students in each comprehensive in the country. Now those 10 students are allowed to sell their hard won Russell group place to the highest bidder. The highest bidder would still have to meet the minimum academic entry requirements for the institution. This could be a substantial transfer of wealth to 18 year old comprehensive school kids at just the time in life when you need it. Also the prospect of 20 or even 50 grand say just for doing well in your A levels is going to have a massive motivational effect on many students at comprehensives. The make up of the student body at Russell Group institutions would likely be unchanged, but a substantial redistribution of wealth would have taken place. One thing the kids with 20 or 50 grand and good academic grades could do is get to a good American University, scholarships could be available. In time this could give the UK a substantial remittance income as the comprehensive school kids thrive abroad. A bit like Filipino health workers.

    Is the education of undergraduates the overriding concern for the academics running Russell Group universities. Sadly probably not. The Russell Group universities are primarily interested in research. The academics are rated on what they publish not what they teach. It's entirely possible that on the whole teaching is better at non Russell Group institutions, or at least some of them. For example are the medical doctors freshly qualified from the new medical school on the Chelmsford campus of Anglia Ruskin University any worse than the medical doctors from the Russell Group institutions.

    A distinction needs to made between Oggsford and Cambridge and the other 22 Russell Group Universities. Oggsford and Cambridge have 7 plus billion pound endowments each. The other members only a few hundred million. Although the cash is split between Oggsford and Cambridge colleges, in theory they could survive without government teaching money the 22 others not so. Although obviously only the income and never the principle of the endowments should be touched. Also Oggsford and Cambridge have only expanded their undergraduate intake slightly (but more postgraduates) whereas the other 22 have participated more in the expansion of higher education.

    One cheap quick thing you could do is change the rules to University Challenge. One team for each 10,000 students at an institution. This would mean only 2 teams each from Oggsford and Cambridge but 4 teams from the University of Manchester.

    Are the football players in the premiership the only true meritocracy? As far as I know there are no Etonians or Oggsford or Cambrdige graduates playing in the premiership. Possibly there are no public school boys in the premiership unlike the England cricket team. Etonians have followed the money over the years. For example there are now famous Etonian actors. Why no Etonian footballers? Not all great footballers are great athletes. It should have been possible for Eton to have trained one premiership standard footballer by now. The only answer is they haven't tried for class or snobbery reasons.
    Do we have a class bound hierarchical education system because we have a class bound hierarchical society. Or is it the other way round?

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  2. «This means that courses with "poor outcomes" - measured in terms of dropouts, low ensuing employment rates and wages, and high initial costs and student debt - will have their enrollments capped»

    I think that's quite wrong: what will be capped in the number of state sponsored places (studentships loans) that the state will be funding, those willing to pay fees out of their own funds will not be prevented from pursuing those degrees.

    «Inevitably exceptions will be made for strategically important courses, like medicine»

    That seems to me a rather strange claim, as the number of state-sponsored places in that expensive sector is already tightly capped, to the point that most new doctors practicing in England have foreign (mostly indian and african) degrees:

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/feb/09/britain-needs-to-double-the-number-of-doctors-it-trains
    "Last year 59% of new registrations in England had been trained by other countries, writes Prof Rachel Jenkins [...] The number of medical student training places in the UK needs to double. This should not be as expensive to Treasury as feared"

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/jun/08/nhs-hiring-more-doctors-from-outside-uk-and-eea-than-inside-for-first-time
    “Unpublished figures from the General Medical Council (GMC) show that 7,377 (37%) of the 19,977 doctors who started work in the NHS in 2021 had a British qualification. A total of 10,009 new medics learned medicine outside the UK and the EEA – so-called international medical graduates (IMGs) – compared with 9,968 within. [...] In 2021 a total of 1,645 doctors from India began working in the UK, as did 1,629 from Pakistan, 1,250 from Egypt, 1,197 from Nigeria and 522 from Sudan – a total of 6,243. They comprised 31.3% of all the medics who joined the GMC register, and almost two-thirds (62.4%) of the IMGs.”

    It could also be claimed that sponsoring students in medicine for 85% white England is racist as then the graduates would hoard good middle class doctor jobs stealing them from immigrants from 85% colored rest-of-the-world.

    «and engineering»

    Actually think thanks connected to the government are suggesting stopping state sponsoring of STEM degrees, calling them "legacy" subjects, as England has very little industry left that needs engineering (or computing) graduates, and regardless it is much cheaper to import engineering (or computing) products from China and the few needed engineering (or computing) professionals from India than to make the products or train the engineers in England, and there is the racist issue on this too.

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  3. Ben Philliskirk22 July 2023 at 17:25

    The problem with the critics is that many still hold to the ridiculous Blairite line that if all young people get a university education then they will automatically become broad-minded, affluent individuals. This is blatantly naive. 'Education, education, education' actually solves few of the problems created by society, partly because education is bound to reflect wider inequalities, and partly because it is currently extremely time-limited to a certain phase of life. Given that some people will have to do the 'dirty', currently low-paid jobs, that people develop mentally and in attitude at different times of life, and that jobs and skills alter quite quickly, it's much more sensible to try and encourage a more intelligent public sphere, to massively bolster 'life-long learning' and state and business funding of vocational qualifications, but also to realise that academic education is naturally elitist in some form, but to try and make this elitism linked as much as possible to intellectual potential and interest rather than money and status.

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    1. «the ridiculous Blairite line that if all young people get a university education then they will automatically become broad-minded, affluent individuals. This is blatantly naive.»

      To me it seems fairly astute, because the blairite/neoliberal line never included the "will automatically become" claim, it was always "depending on merit may become" and many parents of course thought that their own children had that "merit". Blair's great idea was "meritocracy rewards the successful (and their precious children)", not "education rewards everybody". It is just standard thatcherite competitive individualism.

      «make this elitism linked as much as possible to intellectual potential and interest rather than money and status.»

      It is a good omen that I just saw out of the window a flock of pigs in the sky gliding back towards their sties in the warm light of the evening :-).

      That may mean that most middle class parents instead of aiming for money and status for their own children will be content to pay taxes to further the intellectual potential and interest of other people's children :-).

      http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/new-labour-flounders/story-e6frg6ux-1225780935815
      «A No10 aide admits that Brown does not have the natural empathy with the middle classes that Blair did. "The moment Tony sent his son to the Oratory those voters thought - 'he gets it',"»

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  4. It seems to me that "critical thinking" is the route to AI. The UK foot shooting festival is still open?

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  5. In the United States, wasn't the rise of woke and of "millennial socialists" down in part to a collapse in graduate job prospects caused by the Great Recession?

    (Link to Noah Smith's Twitter thread)

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