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The great American philosopher and educator Mortimer
Adler was the son of an immigrant jewellery salesman. He dropped out
of school at 14 but became fascinated by philosophy and went to night
classes at Columbia University. Throughout his teaching career in
America’s most prestigious universities, Adler remained devoted to
helping those who had no formal schooling to return to education. No
one, no matter how old, should stop learning, according to Adler. He
himself wrote more than twenty books after he turned 70. Spiritually
too, Adler, never stopped developing. A self-described pagan for most
of his life, Adler became a Christian when he was 83 and converted to
Roman Catholicism when he was 96. I say all of this just to give you
a context for a quote - part of my text for today:
The
purpose of learning, said Adler, is growth, and our minds, unlike our
bodies, can continue growing for as long as we live.
My thesis is that education is for everybody and for all our lives.
Looking to a
source more appropriate for where I speak today, I can cite a text
for and against my thesis, as is often the case in the Bible:
Depressingly, Ecclesiastes 1:18 states:
- in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth
sorrow.
I much prefer Proverbs
20:15:
- There is gold, and a multitude of rubies: but the lips of knowledge are
a precious jewel.
Lifelong learning is the key theme in today’s world of higher education.
The purposes of learning are varied - personal development, citizenship,
social improvement, cultural development, economic prosperity of the individual
and of society, or simply employment.
In a sense, Winchester –
and here I mean the district - is a privileged community in terms of
learning and education. Over 30% of the Winchester population is
qualified to degree level against a national norm of some 19%. At the
same time, the levels of unemployment in the District are very low at
less than 1%. Only 78 young people in the whole district are not in
employment, education or training.
Thus there is clearly much to
celebrate.
Yet there are also
concerns. 23% of adults of working age in Hampshire and the Isle of
Wight have poor literacy skills and 22% have poor numeracy skills.
In Winchester the figure is under 20% but there are some wards where
the levels of very low literacy and numeracy are higher than the
national average. The generally high educational standards in
Winchester district often obscures the fact that there are pockets of
deprivation with poor, sometimes very poor, literacy and numeracy
levels.
What then are the barriers to learning that sustain these pockets of educational
deprivation? Research by the Winchester Community Learning forum has identified
three main obstacles – you may know of others:-
Economic reasons are the
strongest factor that people cite as preventing them from entering
adult education. Basic skills classes tend to be free for all, but
many other classes can range from £5 to £10 a session,
which over the year add up to a substantial sum for many. Often these
courses are free to those on means-tested benefits but they don’t
know it. Finding affordable childcare is a problem often cited by
providers as a barrier. Only a small minority of classes provide
crèche facilities and for many low-income families it is not
financially feasible to pay for private childminders.
The second barrier is
about time and geography, especially for those living in rural
communities. Finding the time to travel by poor public transport
makes it very difficult for individuals who have to juggle a range of
commitments. Where the courses are provided is as critical as making
them available at all. Courses must be provided in a range of venues
throughout the district and at a range of times - daytime, evenings,
weekends.
Thirdly,
there is a psychological barrier to be overcome. Many adults find the
prospect of re-entering formal education daunting. Classes that are
specifically aimed at improving basic literacy and numeracy may put
off potential learners because they feel embarrassed at their lack of
such skills. Accessible adult learning provision is critical to
combating the lack of self-esteem which prevents individuals from
taking positive steps to transform their lives.
I have been talking mostly
about lower level skills and training. I will now skip primary,
secondary and further education and move to my own world of higher
education.
As I mentioned earlier,
the name of the game nowadays is lifelong learning and to that I
would add widening participation – opening up university education
to those whose circumstances would in the past have effectively
denied them a place for a variety of reasons:-
-
firstly, because of
their gender. This no longer such a key issue as well over half of
Higher education students are women. At Winchester, the figure is
over 70%.
-
race remains an issue
– there are still barriers to those in the Afro-Caribbean
community; but not amongst Asians, except for some Asian women where
cultural taboos about the role of women are still strong
-
disability has been a
huge barrier – you can’t learn if you can’t get in to the
library or read the books
-
social and economic
deprivation is the most important barrier in the eyes of the
government
-
finally, educational
deprivation in the immediate community or in the family is a
barrier. Worryingly, the most statistically significant determinant
of whether a young person goes to university is whether their
parents went
The Government’s top
priority for higher education is to expand the system so that, by
2010, 50% of the population aged 18-30 will have experienced higher
education at some point. Ministers insist that this expansion must
and will be achieved by increasing the involvement in higher
education of people from groups currently underrepresented,
especially people from the lower socio-economic classes 4-7.
There has already been
some significant successes. The proportion of students in the UK from
socio-economic classes 4-7 has increased from 25% to 28%. At
University College Winchester it has gone up from 27% to 28%, a
considerable achievement in what is an affluent catchment area.
The proportion of students from state
schools across the country has increased since 1997 from 82% to 87%.
The proportion for Winchester has increased from 90% to 97%.
The
percentage of students from neighbourhoods with very low
participation in higher education at University College Winchester
has increased from 8 to 11% - a direct result of a widening
participation policy that sees us working hard in educationally
deprived wards in the county, for example parts of Basingstoke, and
amongst faith communities in the inner cities. The latter is a direct
result of pressure from Bishop Michael who is one of 9 Diocesan
appointments on our Board of Governors.
Age is now less of a
barrier than it was. Over 20% of our students are over 21 when they
join us. We recently graduated a student aged 84 – I hasten to add
that he had not been with us since leaving school!
I should finally mention
another category of the population which has been deterred from
entering higher education - the disabled. Significantly disabled
students have doubled as a proportion of all students in the last
three years and now comprise nearly 3%. We are proud at Winchester to
have increased our proportion from 2.8% to 4.3% in spite of the fact
that the College is built on the side of rather a step hill! We are
spending £1 million in adapting our buildings and equipment to
allow disabled people to achieve a fulfilling higher education
experience. One of my very best memories will always be Peter White,
the BBC’s disability correspondent, opening a facility which allows
blind people to use voice activated computers to download any data
they want from the internet and print it off in Braille. Technology
properly applied is a liberating force of monumental proportions for
the disabled.
The increase in the
proportion of young people who go to university has been dramatic,
from around 12% in the 1960s to over 40% today and growing. However,
the UK has only just caught up with the rest of the developed world
in this respect, in the face of entrenched opposition from those who
claim that “more means worse”, whether it is the number of pupils
getting A levels or how many go to university. I am sure you will be
able to read in your Telegraphs and Mails this Sunday morning the
facile argument that what we need is more plumbers rather than more
graduates. The same poppycock was pedalled when schooling was made
compulsory over a hundred years ago. The argument then was that the
country needed children to gather the harvest and work in the mines
and mills. Similarly, in the 1960s, the same reactionary argument was
put that allowing the working classes to go to university would give
them ideas above their station and lead to shortages of manual
workers. Just imagine the state that Britain would be in today if it
was still only one in ten that went to university. The economic
powerhouses of the last 50 years, America Japan and Germany,
recognised early that a highly educated workforce was critical to
economic success. Britain has only now climbed back up the prosperity
ladder to become the world’s 6th biggest economy as the
numbers in higher education increased dramatically.
And all this has been
achieved with the lowest drop our rates in the western world, having
only grown from 14% to 18% as the number of university students has
doubled in size since the 1980s. Graduate employability remains
extremely high.
Technology and the market
will look after the plumbing – we need well educated people to
design the technologies of tomorrow, to cure our sick and to bring
their entrepreneurial skills to bear on the problems facing society
in the 21st century.
And finally, something
about University College Winchester itself. What is it and where are
we going?
The College has an
Anglican foundation – one of some 15 Church Colleges still
surviving as independent institutions. Founded in 1840 by the Diocese
of Winchester to train teachers for church schools, the College has
in fact been providing university degrees across a much wider range
of subjects for more than two decades. We now offer over 20 subjects
with scores of different degree programmes, from the more traditional
such as Archaeology and English to newer highly vocational subjects
such as Leisure Management and Performing Arts.
It is in part because of
its Anglican Foundation that the College includes in its mission
statement the aim, and I quote, “ to serve the social, spiritual,
and ethical needs of its members and the wider community”.
As a relatively small
college of 5,750 students, 2,500 of whom are part-time, Winchester
seeks to provide education on a human scale, within a collegial
learning community, based on Christian values. I should clarify,
however, that it is in no way a denominational institution. It
welcomes staff and students of all faiths and none. These
fundamentals, do, however, position us well to enthusiastically meet
the life long learning and widening participation agendas.
We have changed our name
from King Alfred’s College because that title did not say where we
were - Winchester, or what we did - university education. Having
previously awarded degrees of the University of Southampton under an
accreditation agreement, we have recently been granted the powers to
award our own Winchester degrees. If all goes well we will change our
name again next year to simply the University of Winchester, dropping
the word “college” which makes people mistake us for a college of
further education.
We are very much a
teaching-led institution. We are not and do not seek to be a leading
research university such as Southampton. The lower emphasis on
research is why our lecturers have enough time to provide much more
teaching to students than they would get at a prestigious research
university even if they could get in. That is why we can take
students with lower A level attainment yet still turn out graduates
after three years who meet the exacting standards of Southampton
University.
The quality is generally
high. Our Archaeology department, for example, is one of only three
in the country to get a maximum possible 24 out of 24 score for
academic quality - in the exalted company of Durham and Southampton –
I can’t resist saying that Cambridge only got 23!.
Teaching-led we will
remain but not teaching-only. We are rated as having national and
international excellence in some research areas, including History
and Theology and Religious Studies. Our research rankings put us
ahead of some 25 established universities. We have nearly 100 PhD
students and around 250 studying on Masters courses.
The College’s annual
turnover is £25 million, and with the spending power of the
students, we inject £40-50 million into the local economy each
year. We employ 300 full time and 200 part-time staff. If you
include casual academic and other staff, we end up with over 900
people going through our payroll each year
So we have a heritage
institution in a heritage city. But we are modern too. A thousand
networked computers are at the very heart of our learning environment
- every bit as much as our Library. We have over 1000 student
bedrooms, every one of them wired for internet access. Over the past
ten years we have invested some £40 million in the Winchester
campus, opened a new campus at Basingstoke and by 2007 will have
competed a new £8 million student centre.
Enough of mammon and
enough of me. God is not as evident as he should be around our campus
as he is not in society at large. However, we believe he is amongst
us in what we do every day – to bring knowledge where there is
often ignorance, working in our community, especially amongst the
disadvantaged and the deprived, lighting up prejudice and seeking to
fashion its destruction. These are lofty ideals but we believe with a
passion that they are achievable.
God bless you all and
thank you for listening.
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