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What is the function of a university? Ivory tower or trade school for plumbers?

Brenda Barrett (Professor of Law and also Director of Quality in Middlesex University Business School, London)

Quality Assurance in Education

ISSN: 0968-4883

Article publication date: 1 September 1998

1596

Abstract

In 1967 an academic wrote: “AA university is not a trade school for the production of plumbers”. He wrote about legal education which in England, as in many other countries, has a tradition of recognising academic study and vocational training as separate stages on the route to professional qualification. Thirty years ago universities catered for a relatively small sector of the population; concentrating on undergraduate studies for students entering at the age of 18. Notes the evolution in universities since that time and debates the experience universities should be providing for students today. It will suggest that the failure to distinguish the various forms of higher education is detrimental to the degree and this in turn is harmful to universities. It will conclude by questioning whether Dearing is likely to provide appropriate solutions to the problems

Keywords

Citation

Barrett, B. (1998), "What is the function of a university? Ivory tower or trade school for plumbers?", Quality Assurance in Education, Vol. 6 No. 3, pp. 145-151. https://doi.org/10.1108/09684889810220447

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1998, MCB UP Limited

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