Ronja wrote:
So, the students will likely have to pay more for a crappier education which benefits both them, the industry and the country less? This does not sound sane.
Unfortunately, I think the key problem is that maintaining the current level of education costs more money than exists to pay for it, especially given other priorities within the government.
Analogy: a family comes upon hard times via a pay reduction of the main breadwinner. They lose 25% of the monthly income. In order to make up the shortfall, part of the family's plan is to eat less expensive foods - cheap pastas and red sauce out of a can, store brand hot dogs, cheap white bread instead of nice multigrain - those kinds of choices are made. Because of the bad economy and inflation, prices are going up at the food store, so the family "will likely have to pay more for crappier food which benefits them less. This does not sound sane. Yet, it is a reality. The money can't be invented or manufactured out of thin air. The solutions that would allow more money to be generated are too long term to help the situation now....so the family and its food, and the schools and their education...have to make due, bite the bullet, overcome, improvise and adapt.
Ronja wrote:
"Clients" usually get to choose based on some kind of "product comparison", i.e. value/money. Education isn't like that - it is nowhere near a free market, where the client/customer has enough information to make a good choice.
I'm not sure what the system is like in that regard in Britain, but in the US students can, and do, comparison shop schools. There are about 4100 colleges and universities in the United States. That's 1 college/university for every 10,250 people between the ages of 15 and 24. That ratio results in a huge competition among colleges/universities to attract students, and also results in the reality that if you want to go to college, you can. People heavily research the colleges they look at - they visit them personally in the year before college - they research what subjects the school is reputed to be best in - they look at how graduates are viewed, etc. The choice is quite often a very intensively studied one.
It seems to me that a free market in education has been shown to work smashingly. The United States has had some of the best universities in the world for as long as records have been kept. Three of the top five universities in the world, Harvard, Yale and MIT are in the US -
http://www.topuniversities.com/universi ... kings/home This year's top 20 schools in the world contain 13 schools which are in the United States. So, if the US "free market" system sucks so bad at providing education, one might wonder why such a disproportionate number of great schools are in the US. The UK, of course, is no slouch with 2 in the top 5 (Cambridge and University College London) - so, one things for sure, we know that the smartest folks are the Brits and the Americans, no matter how you slice it....
Ronja wrote:
Who or what will guarantee that the student gets her/his money's worth?
Only the student could ever guarantee that. College is what a student makes of it. If he wants a party, he'll get a party. If he wants to learn, he'll learn.