El Barto":bj7fv96e said:
As someone who works in the film/tv commercials industry I can safely say that a degree is a complete waste of time and money...
... I dropped out of school at 15 and got a job as a runner next to recent uni graduates, it really didn’t matter. We were all in the same boat.
I joined BBC engineering straight from school (they used to advertise in Radio Times!). Our first three months was
intensive physics, electronics and operational training. The lecturers said it was the equivalent of the entire first year of an electronics degree* (back then), and that was just the academic part (in roughly six weeks!).
Every Friday there was a test, against the clock and with a pass mark of 90%, and you were only allowed to fail one of those tests (two failures meant termination). Around 1/3 of my course were graduates, about four of them were electronics graduates. The rest of us were straight from school. Two people (graduates) walked off the course as they couldn't take the pressure. I had several weekends of solid study (we were told what would be tested the following week), and friends often pulled all-nighters on Thursdays. I think two or three people were terminated.
All that was in the 1970s and 1980s. I did eleven years in the BBC and loved it. I worked on a number of BAFTA-winning TV shows (including all three of Attenborough's first wildlife "blockbusters", Life On Earth, Living Planet, etc.), and at the age of 22 was a Radio 4 producer (on attachment), but I finally resigned when I couldn't get the production job I wanted because I didn't have a degree (I kept coming second at interview).
So I did a four-year sandwich course at our local Polytechnic, which turned into seven years, when my sandwich employer offered me a job in the middle of a recession (so I finished part-time).
So when my son wanted to study a media course (at Bournemouth), I took a keen interest. We went down to the open day together. The place is rated as one of the best meejuh universities in the country,
and the BBC even sponsors some of its courses. All I can say is, "If that's true, heaven help people on some of the other courses."
It was evident the lecturers were teaching stuff they had learned from books, not practiced themselves, and that many of the subjects had been dumbed-down to suit the abilities of the students. They had a bizarre TV studio - full of then state-of-the-art kit, but physically laid out in such a way as to be practically unusable. It had cost millions, but evidently been designed by nobody who had ever worked in a production TV studio, nor understood the necessities.
We (parents and potential undergrads) watched some promotional videos in a big lecture theatre, including cameos of four graduates, saying how wonderful the courses were. When the lights came up, I asked the Dean (who was taking questions), how many of those four were working at degree level in the industry. One of them was a runner, and that was it.
It turns out that each year, meejuh courses "graduate" more people than there are jobs in the entire UK broadcast industry, by several times. So small companies use them as unpaid interns, because supply exceeds demand by so much. And every day one sees and hears amateurish errors in broadcast activities, because the commitment to skills and operational training is no longer there.
One of my daughters, incidentally did her degree and PGCE at Bath Spa. She is livid about the Vice Chancellor's pay-off. Never mind the salary and perks, the golden handshake alone is worth around 25 yeas of her salary at the peak of her teaching career (certainly not now!).
Russell Group universities aren't exempt, either - my other daughter goes to one presently, and I've seen some of her coursework.
It's all horribly broken as far as I can tell.
E . :-(