woodbloke":392aow9l said:
Why is that Richard? There seems plenty of 'take-up' and folk interested in pursuing this sort of activity...it seems odd that this course is going to close - Rob
I don't know all the answers as I'm not party to information available to senior management at the college. But I think it all comes down to permutations on numbers one way or another.
*My course usually recruits 15- 17 students each year. Other courses recruit 45- 55.
*Furniture students take up a lot of space to learn, eg, studio, workbench in a workshop, a share of all the three phase machinery in the machine shop and professional wood finishing/spraying facilities, and all the technician support needed to maintain that area. A student graphic artist might take up a desk space 4' X 3' plus a computer and some software, and a really traditional graphic artist may use a drawing board and drawing tools. Maintenance of the hardware and software is relatively economical.
* With small year groups (less than about twenty students per year group) the teaching team is small. In my case I'm pretty much a one man band with some teaching expertise 'bought-in' for certain modules. It was put to me when the closure was announced that if I got sick or died, who would be able to step in and run the course? Larger courses have a larger teaching team and there is cover for unexpected shocks like that.
* Application numbers dropped significantly for my course this year, about 30% down on the previous year if I remember it right before the college stopped people applying. Having said that application numbers for entry in September 2011 were up by about70% on numbers for 2010.
* Fees rose from about £3300 per year for students starting in 2011 to nearer £9000 for students starting in September 2012. You can extrapolate from that a course taking on 50 new students is going to give a better return than a course taking on 15- 17 students. And that's especially the case if those students are relatively economical to teach, eg, apart from the cost of the lecturuer equipment needs that are either relatively harmless (not much in the way of H&S to worry about) unsophisticated, or relatively economical to maintain, repair, upgrade, etc.
I guess that'll do for now. Slainte.