糖心Vlog

Party lines and party lapses

What would politicians do for higher education in the next government? To find out, our panel gave them a grilling

Published on
April 23, 2015
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Higher education wasn鈥檛 going to be an election issue. That鈥檚 what everyone said. It wasn鈥檛 a vote winner, but could be a vote loser. Politicians would leave well alone.

But Ed Miliband disagreed. Against opposition within his own ranks, Miliband pushed through his plan to cut the tuition fee cap by a third. Higher education was back on the electoral agenda.

Or was it? Fees have certainly been a live issue, and the Conservatives have rewarmed their 2013 announcement about scrapping the cap on student numbers. But what else has been discussed in anything but abstract terms?

This week, we put the questions that matter to the higher education representatives for the Conservatives, Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the Greens.

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With all the manifestos published, our panel explores a聽wide range of topics, and it鈥檚 not just what鈥檚 said but also what鈥檚 unsaid that is illuminating

The questions are posed by a 糖心Vlog election panel with experts from across the key policy areas that are 鈥 or should be 鈥 under scrutiny in the run-up to 7 May.

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Greg Clark, for the Conservatives, makes the case that five years under the Tory-led coalition have left universities in a better place than could have been expected, with a 鈥渞obustly sustainable鈥 funding model that is admired by other countries.

Liam Byrne, for Labour, sees a system that is fast 鈥済oing bust鈥 and pitches Miliband鈥檚 fees cut not as a financial risk but rather as part of the solution. He also makes clear Labour鈥檚 focus on skills, technical education and apprenticeships.

For the Lib Dems, Baroness Sal Brinton is one of the few to admit past errors (that fees pledge), while highlighting her party鈥檚 role in supporting lifelong learning and protecting universities鈥 freedom, including on anti-terror and immigration policy.

Finally, Dave Cocozza, for the Greens, backs a traditional academic view, opposing the metricisation of higher education, fees, punitive immigration policy and privatisation.

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With all parties having published their manifestos, our panel pore over the details across a wide range of topics, and it鈥檚 not just what鈥檚 said but also what鈥檚 unsaid that is illuminating.

Take one example: the catastrophic fall in part-time study over the term of the last Parliament, a decline highlighted this week by the new vice-chancellor of the Open University.

Peter Horrocks points out that the number of part-time students has dropped by 37 per cent in the past five years, a figure that equates to 鈥200,000 life opportunities that have been lost鈥ach one a tragedy鈥.

What will the parties do to stem this demise, asks one of the experts on our election panel?

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Clark鈥檚 answer is to 鈥渨ork with the sector鈥, for example on expanding degree apprenticeships; Byrne鈥檚 is to focus on technical degrees as an alternative to the 鈥渢raditional academic route鈥; while Brinton fleshes out a more detailed plan, incorporating access to loans and grants, a credit accumulation and transfer system, and a matched-funding scheme involving employers.

It鈥檚 understandable in the context of a general election campaign that party leaders won鈥檛 talk about higher education much beyond tuition fees, with a little more policy detail offered in the manifestos.

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But as always, the devil is in the detail. We hope that the questions posed by our election panel will help THE readers to identify where that devil resides 鈥 and who is on the side of the angels.

john.gill@tesglobal.com

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