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UK parliament questions value of degrees

AUG 12, 2009
Physics Today
The Observer : A UK parliamentary inquiry from the Commons select committee on innovation, universities, science and skills has revealed that the number of first-class degrees had almost doubled in a decade at British universities.Different universities demand “different levels of effort” from students to get similar degrees, according to the report, suggesting that top grades from some colleges were not worth the same as others.The report calls for the watchdog overseeing standards in universities to be radically overhauled or scrapped and new guides set for degree marking, noting that while 53% of students achieved a first or 2:1 in 1997, that had risen by last year to 61%.Universities claimed that standards must be high because colleges remained popular with overseas students, but the committee said it was “absurd and disreputable” to justify academic prowess in that way. Phil Willis, chair of the committee, said it was “extremely concerned that inconsistency in standards is rife.”
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