The marginalisation of short-cycle courses in English higher education: addressing the unintended outcomes of policy

K. Orr
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Abstract

Over the past thirty years Higher Education (HE) in England has transitioned from being a relatively small elite system to being a mass system, with some of the features of a universal system (Trow, 2007). Yet, the number of mature part-time undergraduate entrants to English Higher Education (commencing their courses aged 21 or over) has declined significantly in the past ten years (Hubble & Bolton, 2021). This article discusses one aspect of this decline, the marginalisation of short-cycle courses leading to technical qualifications below bachelor’s degree level. These courses have traditionally attracted part-time mature students and they lead to long-established qualifications that are well-recognised by employers. The government’s emphasis on full-time bachelor’s degree courses for students starting under the age of 21 has, however, had the unintended outcome of making these short-cycle courses much less attractive for universities and for students. This article explains that student funding is the most significant barrier to participation, but universities also need to make adjustments if more part-time mature students are to access these short-cycle courses.
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英国高等教育中短周期课程的边缘化:解决政策的意外后果
在过去的三十年里,英国的高等教育(HE)已经从一个相对较小的精英系统转变为一个大众系统,具有普遍系统的一些特征(Trow, 2007)。然而,在过去十年中,进入英国高等教育的成熟兼职本科生(21岁或以上开始学习课程)的数量显著下降(哈勃和博尔顿,2021年)。本文讨论了这种下降的一个方面,短周期课程的边缘化导致技术资格低于学士学位水平。传统上,这些课程吸引的是兼职的成熟学生,他们会获得长期确立的、得到雇主认可的资格证书。然而,政府对21岁以下学生的全日制学士学位课程的重视,却产生了意想不到的结果,使这些短周期课程对大学和学生的吸引力大大降低。这篇文章解释说,学生资金是参与的最大障碍,但如果更多的兼职成熟学生参加这些短周期课程,大学也需要做出调整。
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