Higher education Green Paper: reaction

Universities and other sector bodies have given a cautious welcome to proposals contained in a new Green Paper on higher education

Published on
November 6, 2015
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Graduates in academic gown

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Reader's comments (1)

Fearful of this new world order in HE? You shouldn't be. This "new" agenda is actually not terribly new or controversial at all. In his influential study 'Rethinking Higher Education: On the Future of Higher Education in Britain' [Institute of Economic Affairs], Thomas Lange called for variable tuition fees nearly 20 years ago. It was the right idea then, it is the right idea now. At the time, Prof Lange also made the case for 2-year degrees ... everybody and their kitchen sink wanted to pour scorn on his ideas, only to see Foundation Degrees introduced almost immediately. An income-contingent loan scheme for tuition fee payment was another "controversial" recommendation by Lange ... ; again, introduced soon thereafter. The short of it: apart from some structural changes and institutional mergers, the current Green Paper doesn't really provide terribly novel ideas or approaches of substance. Some (e.g. flex fees) have been around for some time.

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