Public expectations of police education in England and Wales

Tom Andrews
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Abstract

The current Police Entry Qualifications Framework in England and Wales has undergone much debate since its inception in 2018. Recently the Home Secretary backtracked on over a decade’s worth of party policy and undid the requirement for all new police officers to hold or obtain a degree in Professional Policing. This has been immediately followed by several chief constables and elected police and crime commissioners (PCC’s) dropping the requirement for a degree completely. Some have been quoted as saying “the public don’t want police officers sat in classrooms” or words to that effect. Yet no studies exist that do examine what the English and Welsh public do expect educationally of their police force. This study fills that gap by surveying n = 520 members of the public to ascertain their views. It finds that whilst a two-thirds majority of the public ostensibly say they don’t believe police officers need a degree, more than nine out of ten expect them to have some kind of police-specific higher education qualification. They would also feel overwhelmingly more confident if an officer investigating a crime they were a victim of, held a relevant policing-related degree qualification. This dichotomy is then analysed against the wider background of HE and vocational qualifications. It concludes that the problem is not with a requirement for higher education in policing, but the ‘d word’ itself and the marketing of the degree as a ‘requirement’ versus a degree as an ‘achievement’.
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英格兰和威尔士公众对警察教育的期望
英格兰和威尔士现行的警察入职资格框架自 2018 年开始实施以来,经历了许多争论。最近,内政大臣背弃了十多年来的党政政策,取消了所有新警察必须持有或获得专业警务学位的要求。紧接着,一些警察局长和当选的警务与犯罪事务专员(PCC)也完全放弃了学位要求。一些人被引述说 "公众不希望警察坐在教室里 "或大意如此的话。然而,目前还没有任何研究对英格兰和威尔士公众对警察队伍的教育期望进行调查。本研究通过调查 n = 520 名公众来了解他们的观点,从而填补了这一空白。调查发现,虽然三分之二的公众表面上表示他们不认为警察需要学位,但十分之九以上的人希望他们拥有某种警察专用的高等教育资格。如果负责调查他们所受害的犯罪案件的警官拥有与警察相关的学位,他们也会感到更有信心。然后,在高等教育和职业资格的大背景下对这种对立进行了分析。研究得出结论,问题并不在于要求警务人员接受高等教育,而在于 "d 字 "本身,以及将学位作为一种 "要求 "与将学位作为一种 "成就 "的营销方式。
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