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Education campaigners reject idea of students as consumers

Convention for Higher Education’s rallying cry against coalition’s university reforms

Published on
June 13, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

A ā€œstatement of principlesā€ challenging the ideals of ā€œconsumer sovereigntyā€ and financial ā€œrealismā€ that underpin current government policy on higher education has been issued after an event rallying support against coalition reforms.

The eight-point statement emerged from the Convention for Higher Education, organised last month by the University of Brighton’s Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics and Ethics and co-sponsored by the Campaign for the Public University, the Council for the Defence of British Universities and the local branch of the University and College Union.

ā€œTo insist that a university education directly benefits only those individuals gaining a degree is wilfully to misunderstand that university education is a social good as well as an individual one,ā€ it says.

ā€œArguments that a university education should be paid for by the individuals it benefits are destructive of the very idea of such an education as a social good.ā€

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Meanwhile, ā€œa real and serious commitment to widened participationā€ could also ā€œhelp to counter the damaging effects of great disparities in wealthā€.

The text argues that ā€œclear-thinking, independence of mind and intellectual courage benefit the public and not just individualsā€ and that ā€œconsumer sovereignty is both an inappropriate means of placing students at its heart and liable to distort well-structured educationā€.

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Furthermore, ā€œhigher education should be seen as part of a generational contract in which an older generation invests in the wellbeing of future generations that will support them in turn.

ā€œThe higher progressive taxes needed to make this possible would therefore benefit everyone – including current taxpayers.ā€

The document also addresses the vexed question of tuition fees, stating that austerity should not be used as an excuse for levying fees instead of funding higher education directly.

ā€œThe withdrawal of public funding is not something that should be accepted because of ā€˜realism’ about the public finances,ā€ it says.

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ā€œThe removal of fees in Germany is an indication that an alternative is possible: an alternative to the present funding regime should urgently be sought.ā€

matthew.reisz@tsleducation.com

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