Ferdinand von Prondzynski claims that āDivergence has delivered resultsā for Scotland (From Where I Sit, 14ĢżAugust). Really?
The enduring myth for many Scots is that we are better than England in education.
IĢżnote that in discussing Scotland, von Prondzynski avoids using ābetterā but says āambitious and innovativeā, and says that it incorporates the ideal of a āāādemocratic intellectā in which all of its society has a stakeāā.
So England is not those good things? England, with its better participation of poorer people (according to of the University of Edinburghās Centre for Research in Education Inclusion and Diversity)?
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The whole of the UK does poorly in an international comparison of secondary education, according to the released late last year.
In many league tables, Scotland does well only because it has three universities that are truly world-class. Of those, the University of Edinburgh and the University of StĢżAndrews are dependent upon fees from the rest of the UK, with the University of Glasgow less so.
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Given the historical advantage enjoyed by ancients (Scotland had four universities when England had two), the question to be asked is where is Scotlandās equivalent of the University of Warwick, or York or Bristol? Why has the different democratic intellect not produced a new world-class university?
None of this is to say that England is perfect or that Scotland is worse; rather, we all face the same challenges, and we all need to improve.
The self-satisfied hooray for Scotland nonsense blinds us to the real problems.
Jim_Sta
Via timeshighereducation.co.uk
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Hugh Pennington (āScottish freedomā, Letters, 28 August) claims that the von Prondzynski report on reforming Scottish higher education governance is irrelevant to discussion of the independence referendum because it is not mentioned in the Scottish National Party White Paper and because the universities are already within the remit of Holyrood; and that the āhistoric distinctivenessā of Scottish higher education relates solely to the way the relationship between universities and the state has evolved, with the English tradition providing more protection for academic freedom. This will surprise many in English universities today.
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Penningtonās cherry-picking of history aside, it may be noted that von Prondzynskiās own account of his report (āDivergence has delivered resultsā, 14ĢżAugust) stresses the need to improve protections for academic freedom as one of its central principles.
This is highly relevant to an independence debate that is crucially much more about social vision ā including the role of universities in the good society ā than it is about national identity.
The revival of discussions about Scotlandās higher education distinctiveness has come about primarily because of the Holyrood governmentās āno tuition feesā policy, which is informed by the perception that, north of the border, there is a culture of ādemocratic intellectualismā.
Debate should centre on whether or not ā given the different possible outcomes of the 18ĢżSeptember vote ā Scottish distinctiveness can be sustained in the face of the increasingly divergent trajectory of Westminsterās policies privatising higher education and the āBarnett consequentialsā, rather than on the 1858 Universities (Scotland) Act, which seems to have a special place in Penningtonās chamber of historical horrors.
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He appears, however, to agree that there is aĢżādemocratic deficitā in Scotlandās universities. And it would certainly be helpful if the Scottish government were to adopt the current education ministerās public support for the von Prondzynski reportās proposals as collective policy.
Terry Brotherstone
Former president, University and College Union Scotland, and member of the von Prondzynski review panel
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