I don't see the problem.
(i)Employers will always take the top percentile of people for the best positions. In that respects, it makes not odds if 10% or 100% of people have degrees, you still take the top 5% for the best jobs. (ii)Gaining employment is not the sole purpose of education. A better educated society eventually leads to a more civilised, more intelligent and more cultured society. There is nothing wrong in that as far as I can see Evenyone shoudl have the chance to go to university, indeed, people should be positively encouraged to do so. |
Quotes from HYS on the BBC Website:
I got an A in French which shouldn't really have happened. One of the questions on my GCSE geography was 'Name an animal you might find on a safari.' grammar & spelling are some kind of optional extra for an GCSE English pass |
Sample of last year's Maths GCSE - See how you get on (it's the higher paper).
I can see how so many pass these as there are some ridiculously easy questions in there but there are also some more testing ones that make you think (I don't think I ever came across plot boxes before!). So the mechanism looks like may still in place and it's just some sort of PC marking scheme where nobody fails that is doing an injustice. |
Originally Posted by PeteBrant
(Post 7203179)
A better educated society .
Used to be O levels for fairly clever bods,CSE's for not so clever.Do they all take the same exam now? 99% has moved us into the realms of comedy :thumb: |
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