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Geoffrey Alderman: public sector critic unrepentant on retirement

Outspoken enemy of sector regulators steps down as principal of private college, more than six decades after entering higher education sector

Published on
July 19, 2024
Last updated
July 19, 2024
Geoffrey Alderman

Over more than six decades, Geoffrey Alderman has become a constant fixture in UK higher education, if somewhat outside the scholarly mainstream: a respected historian of British Jewry doubling up as a prolific journalist and commentator, an outspoken critic of sector regulators, and a sometimes-lonely defender of Israel in a sector聽that is often seen as sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.

On his retirement as principal of the small, independent Nelson College London at the end of July, he is thought to be the oldest head of a UK higher education institution, aged 80. And it is in the private sector that he has spent the second half of his career 鈥 since rising to become professor of politics and contemporary history at what is now Royal Holloway, University of London and then holding senior administrative posts at the University of London and Middlesex University, he served as vice-president of what is now Touro University in New York, and senior vice-president of American InterContinental University London, before a 12-year spell as Michael Gross professor of politics and contemporary history at the University of Buckingham.

鈥淚t took me two full years of lobbying to get the senate to agree that the professorship title could be conferred to excellence in teaching as well as in research, and I thought that was outrageous,鈥 Professor Alderman recalled of his time as London鈥檚 pro vice-chancellor for academic standards.

鈥淚 discovered that it鈥檚 easier to affect change in a private institution than a public institution.鈥

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It was at Touro, in the US, where he gained a taste for facing 鈥渓ess mindless bureaucracy鈥.

鈥淢uch more responsibility is on the shoulders of teachers in a private university [in the US] because there鈥檚 no external examining system, there鈥檚 no second marking, they are the lords and masters of their course and I that I think makes for a better student experience,鈥 he said.

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Preferring the 鈥渓ight touch鈥 of the US system, he spent several decades as a critic of the Quality Assurance Agency and the reviews it conducted 鈥 and, in some parts of the UK, still conducts 鈥 of British universities.

Describing his work as 鈥渇ighting overregulation by people with less experience of academia than I had鈥, Professor Alderman was unwilling to offer a truce in retirement.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been an issue [the QAA]. I wish it聽a speedy and painless death, because we could all do without it, we don鈥檛 need it,鈥 he said.

The English regulator, the Office for Students, which has often found itself at loggerheads with the QAA, has likewise 鈥渄escended into micromanagement鈥, Professor Alderman warned.

More broadly, Professor Alderman warned that higher education 鈥渉as a few issues that it must urgently address鈥ot least of which is finance鈥.

Amid the declining real-terms value of tuition fees in England, he said many universities have turned to the 鈥渜uick fix鈥 of international students 鈥 only to find they are a 鈥減oisoned chalice鈥.

Professor Alderman said he had not recruited many international students at Nelson College because it was聽a volatile market that could 鈥渄ry up at a moment鈥檚 notice鈥,聽and it caused a lot of headaches with the 糖心Vlog Office.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had financial worries before, but I cannot recall a situation like now,鈥 he added.

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鈥淭here are several institutions that are virtually technically bankrupt, and that鈥檚 not a good position to be in.鈥

The answer was not to rely on the quick fix鈥 of overseas recruitment,聽or to lower entry standards, but instead to lift the present cap on fees, and make more government assistance available to help students pay them, he said.

Born in a working-class family in east London, Professor Alderman praised the 鈥渄amn good school鈥 he attended for helping him secure a聽spot聽to read history at Lincoln College, Oxford without any private tuition.

"When I went up to Oxford in 1962, I came from a very cash-limited working-class household in Hackney,鈥 he recalled.

鈥淢y father was a packer in a Whitechapel warehouse, my mother was a shorthand typist, and I went to the local grammar school.鈥

And since then, he said one of the greatest achievements of the sector has been the widening participation movement, and the increased access afforded to more disadvantaged young people.

鈥淭hat journey that I made in October 1962 from Walsingham Road, Clapton, was a life-changing experience for me and I鈥檝e been very happy at Nelson College because we are dedicated to widening participation.聽It is a game changer.鈥

However, he warned that the prospects for early career scholars now are much different聽to what they were in his day.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 want to be a young academic now, particularly in the public sector,鈥 he said.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 want to be in a public-funded higher education institution today 鈥 not only because of the financial situation, but also the relentless pressure to publish or perish, and the meeting of deadlines.鈥

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patrick.jack@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

An impressive contribution to HE over many decades, but I doubt/hope that even at 80+ and allegedly retired we will not still be benefiting from and enjoying in coming years Geoffrey鈥檚 stimulating and incisive comments on HE policy and practice.
Once met, never forgotten. A veritable force of nature. I cant imagine Geoffrey 'retiring'.

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