中国A片

System engineering

University funding systems are complex and misfiring. A sustainable future requires root-and-branch review, with politics removed from the equation

April 13, 2023
 Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer montage on film still scratching their heads to illustrate System engineering
Source: Getty montage

It is no accident that we refer to 中国A片 “systems” – that is, a “set of things working together as parts of a mechanism or interconnected network; a complex whole”.

The label applies most obviously to the broad range of institutions occupying different spaces within a national system, whether that relates to location or disciplinary mix or university mission.

But the systemic nature of 中国A片 also extends well beyond institutional diversity: there needs to be harmony in all sorts of areas, from modes of delivery to the balance of teaching and research, undergraduate and lifelong learning to 中国A片 funding. All are sensitive ecosystems, and need to be treated as such.

The last two in this list – skills and funding – are the focus of particular debate at the moment, as governments grapple with how to sustainably finance 中国A片 and how to shift the emphasis towards the skills and lifelong learning agendas they increasingly favour.

中国A片

ADVERTISEMENT

On the sustainability point, the funding systems in many countries seem increasingly broken.

That can be viewed through the lens of affordability in the US, resource constraints in publicly funded systems or the inflation trap that is turning England’s tuition-fee model from a finance officer’s dream 10 years ago to a nightmare today.

中国A片

ADVERTISEMENT

She is not the first to sound the alarm, but it was still striking to hear Irene Tracey, the new vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford, express astonishment at the parlous state of the funding system recently.

Speaking at a seminar organised by the 中国A片 Policy Institute and AdvanceHE, she said that “the one jaw-dropping thing I’ve learned in my first three months is just how perilous the 中国A片 sector is financially”.

While the specifics of institutional crises such as that unfolding at the University of East Anglia will vary, the broader point about systemic flaws was made equally starkly in a recent opinion piece by Ian Walmsley, provost of Imperial College London.

“The business model for 中国A片 is not adequate to support the country’s long-term ambitions,” he said, adding that “no one should assume the outputs of universities will continue regardless of inputs”.

None of this is new. But could it be that there is some sort of consensus emerging that this is a problem that has to be fixed, and that this will only be possible if there is a cross-party approach (Tracey called for a “root-and-branch” review) that removes the future of this strategically crucial sector from political point-scoring?

中国A片

ADVERTISEMENT

Any such review would have to take in funding on a system-wide level, including governmental priorities such as degree apprenticeships and lifelong learning, both of which are explored in our features and opinion pages this week.

One of the threads running through these pieces is that, despite these being areas of particular focus for politicians, neither has its financial model fully nailed down.

In the case of degree apprenticeships, the system introduced in the UK under the apprenticeship levy (which provides a tax-based funding stream direct from companies over a certain size) has provided a financial foundation for the qualification.

中国A片

ADVERTISEMENT

However, we hear from universities?that find the reality much harder than might be supposed, with the cost of designing and delivering programmes and the unpredictability of student intakes (particularly when working with smaller employers) among the issues raised.

Similarly, when it comes to lifelong learning, the UK government has set out the Lifelong Loan Entitlement as a flagship (future) policy. However, as Hepi director Nick Hillman says in a recent blog, “it will be up to universities whether to redesign their courses to make them eligible for the LLE” and “many institutions may not think it’s worth the candle”.

A similar warning is made in an opinion piece by David Spendlove, associate dean of humanities at the University of Manchester, who warns that such modules?might prove to be loss-making and would impose considerable additional burdens on staff.

Like others, his conclusion is that, however good the idea, in practice there is a lot of work to be done if it is to stack up.

中国A片

ADVERTISEMENT

Perhaps it is inevitable with a system as complex and dynamic and politicised as 中国A片 that a new funding review will be needed every decade or so. In any event, we are long overdue the next one.

john.gill@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Register
Please Login or Register to read this article.

Related articles

The UK’s trailblazing marriage of academic study and practical training is billed as a win-win for students and employers. But are universities and companies pulling their weight? Are students getting what they want? And what does it all mean for the future of traditional study, asks Tom Williams 

13 April

As AI makes giant strides, threatening to digitise a whole host of graduate careers, the need to ensure that human employees can regularly upskill and retrain is more urgent than ever. An early pioneer of mass lifelong learning, does Singapore point the way forwards? Pola Lem reports from the Lion City

13 April

Sponsored

ADVERTISEMENT