1st Edition

Universities, Education and the National Economy

Edited By Michael D. Stephens Copyright 1989
    154 Pages
    by Routledge

    154 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1989, Universities, Education and the National Economy looks at changes in the structure of British industry, which have brought into question the traditional role of universities in the economy. The emphasis on high technology in many emerging industries has prompted a closer relationship between science-based industries and the science departments of many leading universities. However, such co-operation is not always so apparent, and the emphasis in many universities on the wider aspects of education at the expense of a straightforward vocationalism remains a stumbling block. This book makes it clear however that it is not just a case of academic idealism vying with industrial philistinism. These essays, each of them by a leading figure in the world of higher education, emphasize the complexity of the relationship between the universities and economy. The authors discuss how difficult it has been to establish and effective dialogue between the educational and economic spheres and to decide what exactly it is that the latter requires of the former. The successes that have been achieved to date are highlighted and the problems that remain are analysed.

    List of Contributions

    Preface

    Part I: Setting the Scene

    1. Whose University?, Christine Shinn

    2. The Universities, Geoffrey Sims

    Part II: Case Studies

    3. Arts and Social Sciences, Laurence Martin

    4. Education and the Economy, William Taylor

    5. Engineering, Geoffrey Sims

    6. Medicine, Rex Coupland

    7. Science, Alan Cook

    Conclusion, Michael Stephens

    Index

    Biography

    Michael D. Stephens