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The Higher Education Policy
Institute has published a new Policy Note
to mark the 60th anniversary of the Robbins Report on higher
education, which was published on 23 October 1963.
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The Robbins Report laid out the expansion of higher
education in Great Britain and was accepted by the
long-standing Conservative Government and the resurgent Labour
Opposition. However, many of its proposals were not
implemented.
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There are now ten times more full-time students than in
1963. While Robbins expected the costs of expansion to land –
initially at least – on taxpayers, they have generally impacted
students via fees and loans, producing calls for a new
review.
The Robbins report of October 1963 has been compared in
importance to the Beveridge Report (1942). Its recommendations
for a big expansion of higher education were immediately accepted
by the Conservative Government and the Labour Opposition.
In a new HEPI Policy Note, The Robbins report at 60:
Essential facts for policymakers today, (HEPI’s Director) shows that,
although the number of students did grow, policymakers veered off
in different directions to those foreseen by the Robbins
Committee.
- The Robbins principle that higher education courses ‘should
be available for all those who are qualified by ability and
attainment to pursue them’ was initially accepted but was often
under threat afterwards
- The Robbins Report followed, not led, on future student
numbers
- The Robbins Report did not sort out student finance
- The binary divide of universities and polytechnics was
contrary to the Robbins recommendations
- The Robbins Report did not lead to a wave of new universities
as had been proposed
- Robbins’s ideas on student accommodation were not followed
- The Robbins proposals on Whitehall arrangements were ignored
The Policy Note argues that, despite its lucidity, coherence and
meticulousness, the Robbins Report is not necessarily a good
model for tackling current perceived challenges. In particular,
the Robbins Report largely dodged the question of how to pay for
the costs of expansion, merely remarking ‘public money is spent
on what people want’.
Robbins expected public spending on higher education to increase,
which it initially did before falling back. While the country is
three-and-a-half times richer than in 1963, the number of
full-time students is ten times higher. Most of the costs of
expansion have landed on students via fees and loans.
, the Director of HEPI and the
author of the new Policy Note, said;
‘The Robbins Report is a cogent, coherent and comprehensive
document that remains influential and relevant six decades on. We
are still talking about the Report mainly because it foresaw and
prepared for the huge expansion of full-time student numbers
across Britain.
‘However, the Robbins Report is not necessarily the document that
people believe it to be. Although student numbers grew roughly in
line with the Report’s recommendations, the Robbins Committee’s
work was less influential on policy than is often supposed.
‘The Report may have been immediately accepted by both the
Conservative Government and the Labour Opposition but, in the
decades afterwards, Ministers often did the opposite of what it
recommended.
‘For example, Robbins wanted half a dozen brand new universities,
called for a single “system” of higher education and wanted a new
Ministry for Arts and Science. Instead, we got just one brand new
university, a binary system of universities and polytechnics and
a huge Department of Education and Science overseeing both
schools and universities.
‘Nonetheless, we are still talking about the Report 60 years on
because it recognised the immense cultural, social and economic
value of having a large, well organised and autonomous university
system and because its core themes continue to be debated by
policymakers today.
‘If any political party were to propose a new review of higher
education in their forthcoming general election manifesto, then
the Robbins Committee could be a sensible model to follow in many
respects. But it also would not be a panacea for current ills.
‘For one thing, the Robbins Report focused on building a single
“system” of higher education across Great Britain, but devolution
has made that a more nebulous, even inappropriate, idea.
‘Most importantly, the biggest challenge facing universities
today is financial and, although the Robbins Committee took 32
months to deliberate, it dodged the question of how to pay for a
much bigger higher education sector. We’ve been wrestling with
that challenge ever since.’