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As voters in Britain, France, Germany and the Netherlands go to the polls this year, some politicians and commentators want to tip funding and attention away from higher education and back toward vocational training.
In a worrying sign for universities, a unique pan-European survey suggests that this is a shift that would have widespread public support.
The survey of nearly 9,000 citizens in eight European countries reveals that, when forced to prioritize one area of education, only 17 percent chose higher education, compared with 30 percent who want more vocational education and training (VET). Thirty-nine percent backed general schooling and 15 percent preschool.
Support for prioritizing higher education was highest in Spain (30 percent) and Italy (23 percent), and lowest in Sweden (6 percent), Denmark and Germany (both 9 percent).
Marius Busemeyer, a political scientist at the University of Konstanz who helped lead the research, said, “I was really surprised that [support for vocational education] is holding up so well.” Despite the focus in recent decades on higher education expansion, “people still care a lot" about vocational education.
Enthusiasm for vocational training could be a reaction to the enormous expansion of universities, Busemeyer suggested. “If you have strong increases in spending in one field, then people tend to oppose further funding” and to “feel that more attention needs to be paid to other sectors.”
In Germany, there have been concerns that higher education is chipping away at the traditionally very strong vocational system: one prominent critic, the philosopher Julian Nida-Rümelin, coined the term Akademisierungswahn -- loosely translated as academic delusion -- to attack a supposed excessive focus on higher education, a term that has found support in the right-wing party Alternative for Germany.
It is “no longer the case” that the apprenticeship and vocational system is attractive enough to compete with higher education, said Busemeyer. In 2013, for the first time in German history, there were more students than apprentices, he added. Some apprenticeship positions have gone unfilled.
Meanwhile, in Britain, where complaints that too many young people go to university are still frequently made, the Conservative Party, ahead of this week’s general election, pledged a “major review” of funding across tertiary education as a whole. Although details are lacking so far, this could signal a diversion of money away from universities in favor of further education colleges and proposed new institutes of technology.
High levels of youth unemployment across Southern Europe could also be driving support for vocational education there, said Busemeyer. When asked why they backed some forms of education over others, respondents “care mostly about jobs,” he said.
The “bumpy transition from school to work” in France -- where nearly a quarter of young people are unemployed -- could help to explain why more than half of French respondents thought vocational education was the top priority, said Małgorzata Kuczera, a project manager of reviews into apprenticeship and basic skills at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Many French degrees also had a low labor market value, she added, while vocational programs are “underdeveloped” at upper secondary levels -- all explaining strong French support for more vocational spending.
But in Italy and Spain, where youth unemployment is even higher than in France, people are more supportive of higher education. This could be because vocational training was still of low status and attempts to improve it had not worked, said Busemeyer. “In Italy, maybe people think it’s simply not a viable option to build it up,” he explained.
The survey results, published as “Investing in Education in Europe: Evidence From a New Survey of Public Opinion” in The Journal of European Social Policy, may not reflect current opinion perfectly, as the poll was conducted in 2014. But it is the first survey to try to understand exactly which types of education the public value, rather than just looking at support for education spending as a whole.
Universities have benefited enormously from the expansion of higher education, Busemeyer argued, but this growth had reached a point where it could not continue with their traditional missions. “You need further differentiation in the system to blur the boundaries between higher education” and vocational education, he said.
This has already started to happen in Germany, he explained, where there had been an increase -- albeit from a low base -- of dual-study programs that combine academic and vocational learning.
In Italy, however, vocational education is still largely limited to schools, said Attilio Oliva, president of TreeLLLe, an Italian education think tank. Little was on offer from universities, where lecturers held a “snobbish” attitude toward teaching it, he said.
After pressure from industrialists, over the past three to four years Italy has established a number of technical institutes offering two-year courses, but they remain not well-known and still teach only a few thousand students, he said.