Education Secretary Gavin Williamson vows to rip up target of sending 50 per cent of young people to university as he pledges to improve colleges and eliminate 'snobbishness' faced by non-graduates

  • Tony Blair set 50 per cent target but Gavin Williamson today vowed to scrap it 
  • He suggested many graduates finish university without the skills to get a job
  • He pledged to focus on improving the nation's further education provision
  • He said 'inbuilt snobbishness about higher being better than further' must end

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson today vowed to rip up Tony Blair's target of getting 50 per cent of young people to attend university as he promised to improve the nation's colleges. 

Mr Williamson said more emphasis needs to be placed on further education in the coming years if the UK is to recover and prosper following the coronavirus crisis. 

He said the 'inbuilt snobbishness' about higher education being better than further education must be eliminated because they are 'both just different paths to fulfilling and skilled employment'. 

Mr Williamson suggested the focus had been on universities for too long and that for decades the country had 'failed' to give further education the investment it deserves.

Mr Blair set the 50 per cent university attendance target for England more than 20 years ago. 

But Mr Williamson today said it was 'a target for the sake of a target, not with a purpose'.

Gavin Williamson today vowed to rip up a target set by Tony Blair of getting 50 per cent of young people to attend university

Gavin Williamson today vowed to rip up a target set by Tony Blair of getting 50 per cent of young people to attend university

He argued there are 'limits' to what can be achieved by sending more people into higher education, adding that it is 'not always what the individual and nation needs'.

The Education Secretary said the Government should not seek to drive half of young people 'down a path that can all too often end with graduates not having the skills they need to find meaningful work'. 

In a virtual speech hosted by the Social Market Foundation, Mr Williamson said: 'I don't accept this absurd mantra that if you are not part of the 50 per cent of the young people who go to university that you've somehow come up short.

'You have become one of the forgotten 50 per cent who choose another path.

'It exasperates me that there is still an inbuilt snobbishness about higher being somehow better than further, when really they are both just different paths to fulfilling and skilled employment.'

Mr Williamson made a personal commitment to invest in fundamental reform of the post-16 education sector and to stand by the 'forgotten 50 per cent' of young people who do not go to university.

'Unless we change our course, we are condemning our country to low productivity and lost opportunity for a generation,' he warned.

His pledge comes ahead of the publication of a white paper this autumn which will set out the Government's plans to build a 'German-style' further education system to improve skills.

Mr Williamson said: 'For decades, we have failed to give further education the investment it deserves.

'Our universities have an important role to play in our economy, society and culture, but there are limits to what we can achieve by sending ever more people into higher education, which is not always what the individual and nation needs.'

He highlighted figures suggesting more than a third of graduates end up in non-graduate jobs.

'I want everyone to feel the same burning pride for our colleges and the people who study there, in the way we do for our great universities and schools,' he added. 

Recently published Ucas statistics revealed the number of British school leavers applying to start degree courses this autumn has surged to a record high despite uncertainty caused by the pandemic.

Official figures published last year showed that the proportion of young adults in England entering higher education rose above 50 per cent for the first time in 2017/18, fulfilling Mr Blair's pledge from 1999. 

James Kirkup, director of the Social Market Foundation, said: 'Britain's longstanding cultural bias against further and technical education is socially divisive and economically wasteful.

'Socially, too much of our national conversation is based on the implicit judgment that people who don't go to university aren't worth as much as those who do.'

David Hughes, chief executive of the Association of Colleges, said: 'Our current system simply does not support the half of adults who don't get the chance to study at higher levels.

'In fact it relegates them to second class citizens, without the investment and the opportunities to improve their life chances.' 

He added that for too long the nation had 'fixated' on a target set in a different era by a different leader when the needs were 'vastly different'.

Alistair Jarvis, chief executive of Universities UK, said suggesting that there was an arbitrary maximum number of people who should be able to pursue higher education was 'denying aspiration'.

He said: 'What is important is that every student has the choice to follow the path which is right for them to best fulfil their potential.'