By Professor Doom
The UK clearly is
more on-the-ball when it comes to figuring out higher education is, far too
often, a rip off. I covered earlier how they showed that getting a
college degree decreases your income (yes, decreases) knowledge that many in the industry have suspected (or
outright known) for years.
We no longer just
have the people working in higher education who know the truth, the students
are starting to catch on:
(to clarify, an arts degree is
defined as drama, dance, music, fine art, design, cinematics, crafts and
imaginative writing…we’re talking about a big part of the campus here)
Thanks to all the
government money pouring into it, higher education has become extraordinarily
expensive. Trouble is, higher education was never meant to be a money-making
scheme, or a major financial investment.
In decades and
centuries past, scholars studied obscure minutiae of history, biology,
philosophy, or whatnot, not as a means to make money (well, usually not). They
studied out of desire; it was enough to just have a decent life, and if
students were interested in learning such things, that was often as much a
bonus as a distraction from scholarly work.
These students
often became the next generation of scholars…often, but not always. Quite a few
spent years in scholarly pursuit, and then decided that something more “real
world” was suitable. Such a “mistake” was no big deal when tuition was low and
huge student debts were nonexistent.
Trouble is, higher
education has been taken over by educrats, driving the price of education to
ever more ridiculous heights. Most people can’t afford to study obscure
minutiae anymore, and a student who changes his mind after a few years is
basically destroying himself: he’ll never be able to pay off the debts for
“half” of an education.
Thus the proper
focus for a student in higher education today is to pursue a degree that can both justify
the cost, and that he’ll have no trouble finishing.
Art degrees
satisfy the “no trouble finishing” part well enough. I’m not casting any
disdain on the arts here, but it’s just the nature of the field. While in
mathematics there are certainly right and wrong answers, it’s harder, I suspect,
to say a painting, song, dance or essay is wrong, beyond some basic standard.
Of course, my opinion on this isn’t relevant, since what really matters in
today’s “education as irrevocable financial investment” world is if the people
buying the product, an arts degree, think they’re getting fair value for the
money.
Primarily, they
feel cheated, and they’re justified:
A study
carried out by the union also claimed that graduates who had studied arts at
university went on to experience the lowest levels of employment and poor pay.
It must be quite
disheartening to get that degree, only find it leads to nothing, financially. I
bet nobody told them “this is the worst possible degree you can get if you’re
looking to get a job.” To be fair, arts degree programs were never designed to
be financially rewarding. These programs, many of them, were created decades
ago, long before higher education became about getting a job so you can pay off
that student loan. These old programs were just about education, and nothing
more.
• Just 37%
of respondents thought their degree was worth the fees they paid.
• Those working in the arts were found to have the lowest levels of employment, with 42% working full-time and 15% part time.
• Just under 10% of respondents were self-employed, while 6% were engaged in unpaid work.
Looking at the
high proportion of kids being ripped off, it’s very clear we need to change
things. There are plenty of realistic options, and here are three off the top
of my head: We could accept the reality of stupid-expensive higher education,
and change degree programs to be more useful when it comes to making money. We
could make higher education as cheap as it used to be before government “helped”
by eliminating the completely unnecessary bureaucracy we’ve built. We could stop
growing our “easy degree” programs when it’s clear we’re producing far more
graduates than could possibly be gainfully employed, and prune down the ones
with too many graduates by erecting some actual standards.
Well, these are
the choices a rational person would consider. The folks running education are,
of course, clueless:
Last month,
several leading drama schools including Guildhall School of Music and Drama and
Rose Bruford College said they would be increasing their fees, in line with a new £9,250 per year maximum announced
by the government.
So, in the face of
widespread dissatisfaction with the high price of an arts degree…they raise the
price. It’s clear the fools that run higher education in the UK are little
different than the ones in the US.
I’m quoting an
article and results from another country, but I’ve highlighted in this blog that
arts
degrees are so pointless that recipients in the United States have tried to
sell their “unused” degrees, in a hopeless attempt to get out from under the
student debt.
Much like in the
US, the rulers of higher ed just don’t get it:
"Institutions
and the government must also work together to tackle the poor graduate
employment outcomes of students in the arts."
NO.
Look, “starving artist” is a cliché for a
reason, it is simply ridiculous to believe that what we need to do here is
somehow make more jobs for people that go into the arts. I just don’t
understand the confusion of ideas here. There are too many people with the
degrees, too deep in debt. The solution is to stop creating a huge surplus of
these degrees, and stop putting so many people in debt for them.
Instead, they get
the solution of “we need more jobs.” Sheesh. Another educrat with a ridiculously
overlong title has more foolish insights:
She added that unless there was change within attitudes, "high fees and debt will put many students off arts courses, because they will believe that their investment will yield poor returns".
--emphasis
added. Note the title is over twice as long as the name of the title-holder and
thus probably a position that could be eliminated with no harm to anyone’s
education.
What, the problem
is arts graduates have a bad attitude? Seriously? They’re unemployable, they’re
buried in debt, they’ve wasted years of their lives for a degree that they were
led to believe would be useful. And
the educrat blames their attitude.
Sheesh, again.
While some fear
that the expense of higher education will destroy the arts, I’m not so
concerned. It’ll destroy arts departments on campuses, but the arts? No. Anyone
who wishes can learn most everything about what the article calls “arts”
online, and my own experience with individual tutoring (where my students learn
more than in a classroom, and I’m paid more as well) has long since taught me
that arts mentors will become more common once those departments are closed
down.
But, back to the
point: arts graduates have now mostly realized they’ve been screwed by
overpriced degrees of minimal usefulness…and all the useless Poo Bahs who run
higher education can come up with is to raise the price of the degree further,
and ask the graduates to have a better attitude about being ripped off.
I take this as a
sign of hope, that this system is so corrupted, so controlled by the epically
incompetent, that the higher education system’s collapse is imminent.
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