Yes there has been quite a push to get courses done that meet what employers want. Have seen courses in golf management, leisure, policing, retail management - courses set up to meet particular employment needs.
Most of these courses - no, make that nearly all of these courses - are a complete and utter waste of time and effort!
Education in the UK is now a complete and utter mess. It was never cakes and ale, but now there is absolutely nothing in the UK educational system worth keeping. Half the teachers are that are able to stick it out have been forced into becoming useless, the schools are teaching dumbed-down rubbish that nobody really needs and shying away from hard subjects.
And as for tertiary education, it is crap on a stick, writ large!
Can someone explain to me carefully and in terms I can understand, why it costs c.a. £14,000 p.a. (£9k student and c.a. £5k from the state) to educate some poor unfortunate in Golf Course Management, Music Technology, Photography, or some other non-subject that more or less guarantees unemployment?
I just do not get it! WTF costs £14,000? I did an external to the LSE and the entire three year course cost £400 and about £200 for exam fees. (And I was assured that they made a profit on their external students!) OK, that was a while ago, but even if we allow for inflation and multiply that figure by some wild and wacky multiple, I cannot come to the idiotic fees universities are charging today. To go from £600 to £42,000 in 35-40 years makes house prices seem reasonable!
I think the Higher education problem was the decision to turn all polytechnics into universities and to make all their qualifications, degrees.
And we are bamboozling these poor kids into thinking that they have to have that degree if they want a job - and at the same time we are pretending that there are jobs available as sound engineers, photographers, TV cameraman - when there are none (unless the candidate attended one of the top schools, such as Surrey Uni Tonmeister, Royal College of Art, or the NFTS)!
At the same time, there are hundreds of professional certification courses that can be done in their spare time or for a fraction of the cost. For example, a recent survey (published in AV Magazine) of the UK's audio-visual display industry had InfoComm-CTS, CTS-D and CTS-I (
https://www.infocomm.org/cps/rde/xchg/infocomm/hs.xsl/certification.htm) being asked for by two-thirds of all AV companies.
Nobody wanted Media Studies graduates!
And these courses and exams that industries themselves provide cost pennies, compared to the bogus and doubtful pleasure of attending a third-rate university.
And the candidate runs a real risk of actually getting a job in that career field!