It says a lot about British attitudes towards education and hierarchy that a change in institutional naming and governance regulation that occurred a full three decades ago this year still stirs controversy.
The term 鈥減olytechnic鈥 was in widespread use for less than 30 years.聽The creation of officially designated polytechnics was heralded in a by Labour education secretary Anthony Crosland, who firmed up the existing 鈥渄ual system鈥 split 鈥 between 鈥渁utonomous鈥 universities and 鈥減ublic sector鈥 technical colleges and colleges of education 鈥 to carve out from the latter a separate sector meeting demand for 鈥渧ocational, professional and industrially-focused鈥 courses.聽Yet the 34 polytechnics to which a Conservative government gave degree-awarding powers and redesignated as universities in 1992 are still sometimes referred to as 鈥渇ormer polytechnics鈥 鈥 and very often as 鈥減ost-92鈥 institutions.
For some, that label is a badge of honour, the abolition of the so-called binary divide between universities and polytechnics marking a major step towards greater social equality. But in certain media and political circles, 鈥減ost-92鈥 is the mark of an institution that is still inherently inferior to 鈥減re-92鈥 institutions 鈥 some of which also had their origins in technical, science or arts colleges of the Victorian era. For these critics, 1992 marked a damaging turn away from vocational education towards an era of costly university expansion that has brought insufficient economic reward.
Former polytechnics (and their Scottish cousins, the former central institutions) have certainly played a key role in higher education expansion. In former industrial towns and cities of the English Midlands and North, such as Wolverhampton, Stoke, Middlesbrough, Sunderland, Preston and Huddersfield, the local post-92 university is the sole higher education institution. Such universities are also significant drivers of local regeneration; their estates probably include not just brutalist relics from the polytechnic era, but more modern glass-and-steel buildings, too 鈥 built with university-level resources (including international student fees, perhaps) to accommodate a mushrooming student population that also comes with a significant income boost for the local area.
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Go to the centre of a big city like Birmingham, Sheffield or Nottingham, meanwhile, and you are likely to encounter tens of thousands of post-92 university students walking between classes five minutes before every hour. Among English campus universities, the three biggest recruiters of UK students 鈥 all with more than 30,000 鈥 are post-92s: Nottingham Trent (33,590), Manchester Metropolitan University (33,155) and Sheffield Hallam University (30,260). In fact, post-92s make up 12 of the top 20, 聽(13 if you discount the Open University).
Their students often come from less advantaged social backgrounds than those on the leafier campuses of the pre-1992 institutions,聽mostly (though not in London) located further out from the city centre. But those students often go on to highly successful careers in a wide range of important UK sectors. In that sense, post-92s are often described as doing the 鈥渉eavy lifting鈥 on social mobility. So why is it that 1992 is still seen by some as the moment higher education policy in England took a wrong turn?
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Thirty years on, and with skills and employability high on the political agenda, now is a good time to reflect on that question, and to re-examine the impact of the post-92s on UK higher education and society.

The background rumble of laments for the loss of the polytechnics has the potential to bring some policy lightning flashes from Westminster.聽Baroness Wolf, Sir Roy Griffiths professor of public sector management at聽King鈥檚 College London, a panel member on the Augar review of English post-18 education, and now skills and workforce adviser in the Number 10 Policy Unit, that the loss of higher education institutions 鈥渨ith close links to local labour markets鈥 and a 鈥渟tress on part-time, adult study鈥 put the UK 鈥渙ut of step with the rest of the world, and it was barely discussed at the time鈥.
One popular theory about what drove the 1992 changes is that the Tory government wanted higher education expansion and the polytechnics were willing to offer it at a cheaper rate 鈥 if they could have university status to attract more home and (fee-paying) international students.
However, that 鈥渆xpansion on the cheap鈥 theory is described as 鈥渃ynical nonsense鈥 by the man who abolished the binary divide: Lord Clarke, then education secretary in Sir John Major鈥檚 government.
In reality, the most important driver of the decision 鈥渨as the fact that the polytechnics were suffering from the continuing British problem that any technical, engineering or occupational-based education was regarded as second class compared with traditional education at universities鈥, Clarke tells 糖心Vlog.
The polytechnics, he continues, would have been classed as universities 鈥渋n any other European country鈥 and it was 鈥渏ust absurd鈥 that they were 鈥渞egarded by schoolteachers, by parents guiding their children, as an unfortunate second division to which you had to go if you were unable to get into a university鈥. This was particularly true given that 鈥渢hree or four of the polytechnics were undoubtedly much superior institutions to some of the weaker universities鈥.
Clarke did not 鈥済o round trying to score points about increasing the number of university students鈥: his aim was simply to 鈥渞aise the status鈥 of the polytechnics鈥 vocational and technical education, 鈥渁reas which British society and the British economy needed to be stronger in鈥.
So what is the legacy of Clarke鈥檚 landmark decision?
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Rachel Hewitt, chief executive of the MillionPlus group of post-92 universities, says the abolition of the binary divide 鈥渞emains an important milestone in UK higher education, enabling hundreds of thousands to take higher study who might not otherwise have had the chance鈥. The anniversary offers an opportunity to 鈥渞emind ourselves how important our diverse HE system is to Britain, economically and in soft-power terms鈥.
Sir David Bell, vice-chancellor of the University of Sunderland and the former permanent secretary at the Department for Education, says the creation of 鈥渘ew鈥 universities was crucial in raising aspiration to attend university 鈥 and, thereby, made it much easier to realise the subsequent Blair government鈥檚 target for 50 per cent of聽 young people to go through higher education. 鈥淪o I have no doubt that it was an important 鈥 and, indeed, vital 鈥 macro-level social mobility intervention,鈥 he says.
On the other hand, argues Peter Mandler, professor of modern cultural history at the University of Cambridge, we should not fixate too much on the 鈥渢iny little levers鈥 that politicians pull when factors like student demand are far more powerful drivers of expansion.
鈥淧eople have the most ludicrous myths about this process,鈥 says Mandler, author of the 2020 book The Crisis of Meritocracy: Britain鈥檚 Transition to Mass Education Since the Second World War. 鈥淭hey think that expansion only happened because they renamed the polytechnics鈥but] you couldn鈥檛 treble the numbers in higher education without every university growing,鈥 he says. Massification has been an international phenomenon and, by the early聽1990s, the UK 鈥渉ad a lot to catch up鈥 after having 鈥渟lowed things down鈥 prior to the 1980s, he adds.

As to how that all looks on the ground today, post-92s are distinguished not just by their size but also by their innovation. Coventry University, for instance, has established a London campus (helping it attract more than 13,000 international students); a lower-cost subsidiary, CU Coventry, tailored to part-time learners with lower entry grades; and a branch campus in distant Scarborough, a previous 鈥渃old spot鈥 for higher education provision.
Other former polytechnics have acquired significant social cachet: perhaps even too much. For instance, Oxford Brookes University last year for recruiting a high proportion of students from private schools.
In 2019, meanwhile, Sunderland expanded its locally focused healthcare offering by opening a medical school 鈥 traditionally the preserve of Russell Group universities. The university is also a partner, with the local council and a local arts and culture organisation, in a joint venture managing five local venues: the aim is to enhance the city鈥檚 cultural profile in order to boost its creative economy and the aspirations of its young people.
Indeed, while it is fashionable in higher education to talk of a new civic consciousness, many post-92s can claim to have had one from the start聽鈥撀燼nd to be in the vanguard of the current movement.聽Sheffield Hallam, for instance, is flexing its power as a major centre for teacher training and educational research through the South Yorkshire Futures programme, which 鈥 in collaboration with local councils 鈥 aims to raise school attainment across a region hit hard by the loss of mining and steel jobs in recent decades. The programme includes a university-run nursery and a mentoring programme reaching about 2,500 pupils this year.

Unlike many post-92s, Nottingham Trent draws 70 per cent of its students from beyond its region. It is thus a 鈥渕ajor skills importer into the East Midlands鈥, meaning it can build a 鈥渇inancial base to do things for the city and the region we couldn鈥檛 otherwise do鈥, says its vice-chancellor, Edward Peck. And it is increasingly unconstrained by traditional notions of what a university should or shouldn鈥檛 do. According to Peck, who was a member of the Augar panel alongside Wolf, it has begun to 鈥渨orry less鈥 about the question 鈥淲hat does it mean to be a university?鈥 Instead, 鈥渨e鈥檝e moved on to 鈥榃hat does it mean to be a major player in our local economy in terms of skills and innovation?鈥欌
Polytechnics鈥 acquisition of university status entitled them to bid for public research funding. And while Russell Group institutions have largely maintained their hegemony in that sphere, some post-92s have developed what are often called 鈥減ockets of excellence鈥. For instance, Nottingham Trent has particular research strengths in the prevention of sex offending and in medical technology 鈥 the latter linked to the city鈥檚 most famous corporate creation, the pharmacy chain Boots. Nottingham Trent criminologist Loretta Trickett and University of Nottingham linguistics professor Louise Mullany won the award for 鈥渙utstanding contribution to the local community鈥 at last year鈥檚 THE Awards for their of Nottinghamshire Police鈥檚 treatment of misogyny as a hate crime.
Meanwhile, in 2019, Nottingham Trent announced a major partnership with Vision West Nottinghamshire College, providing higher education programmes at the further education college鈥檚 main campus in Mansfield, a former mining town struggling with the legacy of deindustrialisation.聽The students studying in Mansfield are 70 per cent local and 70 per cent mature 鈥 which suggests that the upskilling being delivered will stay within the local area. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got 95 local people studying nursing in Mansfield. They will do their placements in Mansfield and get a job in Mansfield because they don鈥檛 want to go anywhere else,鈥 says Peck.
That is the kind of thing Ray Cowell 鈥 the vice-chancellor who led Nottingham Polytechnic into the university era 鈥 has in mind when he says that since becoming a university, the institution 鈥渉as developed its research capability while expanding what I call its vocational, polytechnic qualities鈥.

With such a range of characteristics among this group of institutions, does the 30th聽anniversary of the binary divide鈥檚 abolition, or the label 鈥減ost-92 university鈥, really mean much today?
Cowell notes that while the 1992 act created a large number of new universities 鈥渁t a stroke鈥, Nottingham Polytechnic had in mind a more gradual, individually focused validation process. The 鈥渙ne fell swoop鈥 approach meant, he argues, that 鈥渕edia such as the [right-wing Daily闭听Telegraph persisted in calling us ex-polytechnics for a couple of decades. There was a feeling that we sort of muddied the water and debased the university title.鈥
Yet since the conversion of the 34 polytechnics聽(the 1992 Further and 糖心Vlog Act also allowed two colleges of higher education to become universities, today鈥檚 University of Bedfordshire and University of Derby), the successive further easing of the path to university title has added a further 48 鈥渕odern鈥 universities 鈥 as they sometimes like to be known 鈥 to the register, in a larger wave of expansion. These figures are cited by Sir Chris Husbands, vice-chancellor of Sheffield Hallam, who argues that 鈥渢he only real interest in talking about the [binary] divide is now among some of the weaker pre-92s, who have seen their position and status eroded by a vibrant, successful and large clutch of modern universities鈥.
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Rather than looking at the 鈥渕inor issue鈥 of the binary divide, Husbands thinks it is 鈥渕uch more important to think about diversity across the sector 鈥 there is diversity within the pre-92s and diversity amongst the post-92s鈥.
Yet others think 1992 failed to truly shift, or perhaps even ended up deepening, the hierarchies of English higher education. As noted by Sir David Eastwood, former University of Birmingham vice-chancellor and former chief executive of the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England, 鈥渁lmost coincident with the abolition of the binary line was the rise of the Russell Group鈥 鈥 the group of large research-intensives that have successfully established themselves in the popular imagination as the country鈥檚 most prestigious universities.
The 1992 changes 鈥渄idn鈥檛 invent hierarchy鈥, Eastwood adds. But 鈥渨hat we鈥檝e seen in the 30 years since 1992 is university brands becoming more important, university clubs [such as the Russell Group] becoming more important and the inexorable rise of rankings of universities鈥.
In the modern era of higher education, students from non-traditional backgrounds have tended to go into post-92s, observes Mandler. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 been an achievement: it鈥檚 allowed us to raise our participation rates. But it does mean, of course, that stratification continues 鈥 and in reality: it鈥檚 not just a perception.鈥
And that enduring 鈥渞igid hierarchy鈥 of institutions, as Mandler puts it, arguably feeds into government policy. The DfE and Office for Students often look at universities through the metrics of graduate earnings and jobs outcomes. The courses they deem 鈥渓ow value鈥 are often those that recruit high proportions of disadvantaged students, particularly in some of the post-92s located in the more deprived suburbs of London.
Moreover, the current Conservative government appears increasingly sceptical about the economic value of expanded university education. That attitude is arguably embodied in its plans, announced in its recent response to the Augar review, to potentially restrict entry to universities and shift more provision away from full degrees towards shorter 鈥渢echnical鈥 courses. Does that stance betray some regret at the loss of the polytechnics or the era of expansion that ensued?
鈥淭his is a definitely a common refrain among Conservative members and MPs 鈥 particularly those who are not especially close to the detail of policy,鈥 says Jonathan Simons, partner and head of education practice at the influential political consultancy Public First. However, 鈥渨ithin government, I think there鈥檚 a view that institutions ought to specialise more 鈥 and that there ought to be routes for quicker, more labour market-specific courses for young people and career changers. Whether those are from new polytechnics, or universities, or Institutes of Technology, or whatever, is generally less clear.鈥
Nick Hillman, director of the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute and former adviser to Conservative universities minister聽Lord Willetts, says: 鈥淐learly, there are parts of Whitehall that would be happy for some former polytechnics to revert to what [parts of Whitehall] perceive to be their previous role, with deeper local roots and lots of sub-degree provision. But this probably misrepresents the role many polys were actually playing.鈥
For her part, MillionPlus鈥 Hewitt detects very confused attitudes from politicians given that post-92 universities are often doing precisely the thing that they say they want more of. 鈥淪ome in politics and the media seem to choose to continuously bash this part of the university sector鈥yet] every week, we hear politicians talk about levelling up or skills shortages or a lack of technical education 鈥 without recognising that the answer to these questions is right in front of them.鈥

So what of the future for post-92s? An institution like Staffordshire University, which offers higher technical qualifications and has about 2,000 apprentices, has to be closely aligned to local business needs, says Liz Barnes, who retired as the Stoke-based institution鈥檚 vice-chancellor in December. Such institutions have to 鈥渃ontinually think about relevance鈥robably more so than the traditional Russell Group-type universities,鈥 adds Barnes, who also worked at post-92s Sheffield Hallam, Teesside University and the University of Derby.
It is post-92 universities that provide the courses tailored to new economic needs and that are best equipped to drive further curricular innovation, many argue. When Teesside first introduced computer games courses, says Barnes, 鈥渋t was very much about the games industry; now it鈥檚 about gamification. I spoke to a medical technology company that said every one of its engineers was a games graduate. I just don鈥檛 think the government recognises the importance of universities of today for providing the workforce of tomorrow.鈥
There is huge potential change coming for higher education 鈥 and arguably for post-92s in particular 鈥 in the shape of the government鈥檚 planned Lifelong Loan Entitlement, the creation of Wolf. Scheduled for introduction in 2025, the LLE will allow adult learners to access loan funding for four years of post-18 education, which could be used to study a聽single module or build up a full degree over time.聽
Peck foresees such innovations having a 鈥渢ransformative鈥 effect on Nottingham Trent. 鈥淚 think what we鈥檙e starting to see here is a bit of a 鈥榖ack to the future鈥 [dynamic]. As we move into the LLE, microcredentials, short courses, flexible learning, credit transfer, NTU will start to look a bit more like it used to look back in the 鈥60s and 鈥70s, with lots of students studying part-time, studying in the evenings, studying at weekends鈥f it鈥檚 necessary and helpful to the local economy and local people for us to go from level 2 [GCSE] through to level 8 [PhD], then we will.鈥
But does this potential return to the polytechnic ethos cast a shadow over the future of some non-vocational subjects? Sunderland, for instance, made a controversial decision two years ago to exit languages, history and politics subjects 鈥 sensing the policy wind.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 speak for everyone, obviously, but I think that a university like Sunderland has, in some ways, returned to its distinguished polytechnic roots as a university focused on the applied, vocational, practical 鈥 with that now including everything from medicine, through engineering, to the creative arts,鈥 says Bell, its vice-chancellor.
One of the big questions is what effect the government itself intends the LLE to have on universities, particularly post-92s. Is it intended to divert demand from deemed "low value" full degrees to cheaper, shorter, vocational courses, leading some institutions towards a more 鈥減olytechnic鈥 profile? Undoubtedly. But significantly shrinking some universities in terms of size and resources might undermine the role that they can play in the government鈥檚 overarching priority of 鈥渓evelling up鈥 in the UK regions 鈥 something many post-92 universities and their ancestor institutions have quietly been doing since Victorian times.
鈥淭he only way we鈥檙e going to level up in places like Stoke or Middlesbrough is by upskilling the [adult] population that never had the opportunity to go to university,鈥 says Barnes. As essential institutions in such deindustrialised cities and towns, whose reach already extends to adult learners, the post-92s might look as though they should meet government priorities.
鈥淲e need more universities in deindustrialised parts of the north of England,鈥 agrees Mandler. 鈥淭he polytechnics鈥ave [higher education] a foothold in places where higher education would otherwise never have been established.鈥
Despite a shifting policy focus towards further education colleges, the FE sector remains underpowered, meaning that levelling up through education will require further and higher education institutions to work together. Like it or not, the acquisition of university status has allowed post-92s to expand and generate a level of income such that their regional clout is sometimes unmatched by any other institution. There are 鈥渘ot many big businesses around our area,鈥 says Barnes of the Stoke region. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got the NHS, you鈥檝e got [online gambling company] Bet365 and you鈥檝e got the university.鈥

In a nation like the UK, however, with its steep social hierarchy replicated in its education system, any 鈥渘ew鈥 university faces a battle.
Even Clarke concedes disappointment that 鈥渢oo many of the polytechnics鈥elebrated their new status鈥 by creating 鈥渟econd-rate arts departments鈥. But overall, he says ending the binary divide 鈥渨as successful. I think it鈥檚 had a very worthwhile effect. Some institutions [among] the former polytechnics have thrived on a great scale.鈥
Critics of higher education expansion often seem to ignore the far bigger economic picture when they bemoan the loss of the polytechnics and the supposed turn away from the 鈥渧ocational鈥 and 鈥渁pplied鈥: that the UK鈥檚 rapid deindustrialisation since the 1980s might have taken away a large amount of demand for such courses. Countries that did a better job of managing deindustrialisation, such as Germany, have maintained stronger vocational education.
And rather than fixating on polytechnics, perhaps there should be more focus on why the older universities, now in the Russell Group, shed their extramural continuing education departments for adult learners from the 1980s onwards.
Either way, Hallam鈥檚 Husbands is adamant that England鈥檚 university system, 30 years on from the abolition of the binary divide, is 鈥渨orld class鈥. His concern is that political currents 鈥 such as inflexible metrics that don鈥檛 take account of regional and institutional contexts 鈥 risk creating less rather than more diversity. 鈥淟ooking ahead, without a clear sense from government of the importance of diversity and collaborations between universities which differ in mission and vision, we may have a handful of world-class universities, but we won鈥檛 have a world-class sector,鈥 he warns.
The American writer William Faulkner famously wrote: 鈥淭he past is not dead. It鈥檚 not even past.鈥 The decision to allow the polytechnics to become universities is a good illustration of that adage, still underlying the policy debate today.聽But as many post-92 universities play a key role in levelling up, meeting the needs of local economies and catering for the kinds of adult learners who will use lifelong loans, they can make a justifiable claim to be a big part of the future.
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